Title: Sensation and Perception
1Sensation and Perception
2What is sensation ?
- Your senses are the gateway through which your
brain receives all information about its
environment - A natural and automatic process
- Often taken for granted until it is interrupted
by injury or illness - People with one nonfunctional sense are amazingly
adaptive
3Overlapping Processes Sensation and Perception
- Sensation the detection and sensing of
environmental stimuli (sounds, objects, odors) - Perception occurs when we integrate, organize,
and interpret sensory information in a meaningful
way - No clear boundary line between the two processes-
psychology often regards the two processes as a
single process
4Sensation
- All sensation is the result of stimulation of
specialized cells, called sensory receptors, by
some form of energy. - The forms of energy most commonly in contact
with light, sound, heat, pressure, chemical
energy - Sensory receptors convert forms of energy into
electric impulses that are transmitted via
neurons to the brain.
5The Senses
- Humans have five basic senses, each receptive to
a different form of energy - SIGHT receives light energy
- HEARING receives sound energy or sound waves
- TOUCH receives mechanical energy
- SMELL receives airborne chemical energy
- TASTE receives chemical energy
6Specialization
- We are constantly bombarded by many different
forms of energy. - Sensory receptors are highly specialized and
sensitive to specific types of energy - For any type of stimulation to be sensed, the
stimulus energy must first be in the form to be
detected by our receptor cells
7Sensory Thresholds
- Our senses are specialized in other ways- we do
not have an infinite capacity to detect all
levels of energy - To be sensed a stimulus must first be strong
enough to be detected- loud enough to be heard,
concentrated enough to be smelled, bright enough
to be seen - The point where the stimulus is strong enough to
be detected by activating a sensory receptor cell
is called threshold.
8Absolute Threshold
- The minimum amount of energy in the environment
that a sensory system can detect (half the time
in trials and research)
9Galanters (1962) Absolute Thresholds
- Sense Absolute Threshold
- Vision A candle flame seen from 30 miles away
on a clear, dark night - Hearing The tick of a watch at 20 feet
- Taste 1 teaspoon of sugar in 2 gallons of
water - Smell 1 drop of perfume through-out a 3-room
apartment - Touch A bees wing falling on your cheek from
a height of about ½ inch
10Difference Threshold
- The smallest possible difference between two
stimuli that can be detected half the time - Also called just noticeable difference (jnd)
- The difference threshold will vary it is not a
constant , even for a specific sensory system
11Webers Law
- A principle of sensation
- For each sense, the size of the just noticeable
difference (difference threshold) is a constant
proportion of the size of the initial stimulus - Whether we can detect a change in the strength of
the stimulus depends on the intensity of the
original stimulus
12Sensory Adaptation
- A gradual decline in sensitivity to a constant
stimulus
13Subliminal Perception
- Refers to the perception of stimuli that are
below the threshold of conscious perception or
awareness - Can subliminal messages in advertising and
self-help tapes change peoples behavior? - Psychologists have found that the effects of
subliminal stimuli tend to be weak or
short-lived, usually lasting only seconds or
minutes.
14Vision
- The sense organ for vision is the eye, which
contains receptor cells that are sensitive to the
physical energy of light. - The most important sense to humans
- Light is one of many different kinds of magnetic
energy that travels in the form of waves - Other forms of electromagnetic energy include
X-rays, the microwave oven, and ultraviolet light
(sunburn)
15Eye Structure Anatomy and Functions
- See an object- light waves reflected from the
object enter your eye and pass through the
cornea, pupil, and lense.
16Cornea
- A clear membrane that covers the front of the
eye, helps gather and direct incoming light
17Pupil
- Black opening in the middle of the eye
18Iris
- Surrounds the pupil, the colored structure that
we refer to when we say someone has brown or blue
eyes - Consists of a ring of muscles that contracts or
expands to precisely control the size of the
pupil and the amount of light entering the eye
19Lens
- Behind the pupil is the lens, a transparent
structure held in place by ciliary muscles - The lens thickens and thins to bend or focus
incoming light (accommodation) - Abnormally shaped eyeballs cause improper focus
of incoming light on the retina - This results in a visual disorder-
nearsightedness, farsightedness, or astigmatism
20Nearsightedness- Myopia
- Light from a distant object is focused on the
front of the retina
21Farsightedness- Hyperopia
- Light from an object or image close by is focused
behind the retina - Presbyopia during middle age, another form of
farsightedness caused when the lens becomes
brittle and inflexible
22Astigmatism
- An abnormally curved eyeball results in blurry
vision for lines in a particular direction - Corrected with glasses that intercept and bend
the light so that the image falls properly on the
retina
23The Retina
- A thin, light-sensitive membrane that lies at the
back of the eye, covering most of its inner
surface - Contains two types of receptors for light rods
and cones - When exposed to light, rods and cones undergo a
chemical reaction that results in a neural signal
24Rods
- Long and thin with blunt ends
- The eye contains about 125 million rods located
in the outer edge of the retina - Specialized function they are very sensitive to
light - We rely on them for our vision in dim light and
at night
25Cones
- About 6 million per eye located in a small
central region of the retina (fovea) - Cones respond differently to different wave
lengths, or colors, of light - Responsible for color vision
- Each cone responds to either red, green, or blue
wavelengths - Cones are very sensitive to small features in the
environment visual acuity
26Processing Visual Information-from the retina to
the brain
- Rods and cones connect to specialized neurons
called bipolar cells - The bipolar cells then funnel the collected raw
data on to the ganglion cells - Ganglion cells are specialized neurons
- There are one million ganglion cells
27How is the information transmitted from the
ganglion cells of the retina to the brain?
- The one million axons of the ganglion cells are
bundled together to form the optic nerve, which
carries messages from each eye to the brain - The place where the axons of the ganglion cells
join to form the optic nerve is called the blind
spot an area that contains no photo receptors
and is insensitive to light
28Optic Chiasm
- After the nerve fibers that make up the optic
nerve leave the eyes, they separate, and some of
them cross to the other side of the head at the
optic chiasm. - The nerve fibers from the right side of each eye
travel to the right hemisphere of the brain
those from the left side of the eye travel to the
left hemisphere
29Neural pathways in the brain
- thalamus- processes information about form,
color, brightness, and depth - midbrain- processes information about the
location of an object - visual cortex processes information about form-
such as angels, lines, movement and distance of
objects
30Color Vision 3 Properties of Color
- Humans can see a range of colors
- 1.Hues different colors we see varies with the
wavelength of light - 2.Saturation vividness or richness of the hue
(purity) - 3.Brightness perceived intensity
- The color of an object is determined by the
wavelength of light that the object reflects.
31Color and other species
- Many animals have some color vision
- Trichromats can see all hues-(humans, monkeys,
apes) - Dichromats can only see reds or greens, blues or
yellows (most mammals) - Monochromats completely color blind (reptiles,
fish, insects, shellfish)
32Hearing
- Sound is air in motion
- When an object vibrates, it causes the air around
it to move in waves - Waves travel 700 MPH
- Humans detect vibrations of a frequency between
30 and 20,000 hertz (cycles per second)
333 Dimensions of Sound
- Pitch- determined by the frequency of sound
- Loudness- the result of the sounds intensity, or
energy - Timbre- the nature of the sound, or the shape
34The Ear Structure and Transduction
- The ear is divided into three areas outer,
middle, inner - OUTER EAR
- Sounds enters through flap- pinna
- Sounds travels through the air-filled auditory
canal
35Middle Ear
- Sound enters middle ear hits tympanic membrane
(eardrum) which vibrates with sound - Behind the eardrum- 3 small bones- hammer, anvil,
stirrup - Stirrup vibrates onto the oval window, a membrane
which covers an opening in the middle ear
36Inner Ear
- Cochlea- transmits auditory information, contains
3 separate fluid-filled canals - Canals spiral inside the cochlea, which wraps
around like a snails shell - Cochlea comprises the Corti- organ which contains
auditory receptor cells
37Conductive Deafness
- Conductive deafness ear is not carrying sounds
from the outer ear to the inner portion - Bones of inner ear may be damaged, or
- may be an accumulation of dirt in the ear
- Person will be equally deaf to high and low tones
38Nerve Deafness
- Person has hard time hearing high -pitched tones
- Damage to the auditory nervous system
- Hair cells in the cochlea may be damaged- can no
longer transduce vibrations of the cochlea fluid
into neural impulses
39Touch
- Skin has 4 main senses of touch Cutaneous
senses- cold, warmth, pressure, pain - Free nerve fibers- responsible for temperature
sensation- an increase in body temperature
elicits a response - Pressure-sensitive cells cells create receptor
potentials when skin is bent or deformed - Basket nerve ending structure that sense
pressure at the roots of hairs - Pacinian corpuscles respond when one feels deep
pressure, such as in a massage
40Taste (Gustation)
- Taste receptors sensitive to sweet, sour,
bitter, salty tastes - Saliva- food enters mouth, mixes with liquid
- Solution flows into tiny holes in the tongue
taste pores - Each pore contains slim, hair like structures
which are part of the taste bud - When stimulated, receptor potential forms
- Nerves pass from tongue to the brain- tastes have
different patterns of neural activity
41Smell (Olfaction)
- The sense of smell is entwined with taste
- Sense of smell can evoke distant memories and
has connection to the temporal lobe - Stimulus for smell is air-born chemicals
- Olfactory receptors- lie beneath nose in two
patches of mucous membranes - Chemicals in the air dissolve in the mucous and
stimulate olfactory hair cells, cilia - Olfactory mucosa- contains free nerve endings
that sense noxious substances like ammonia
42Sensory Deprivation
- What would you do if you couldnt sense anything
at all? - Sensory deprivation studies
- 1. external stimuli kept to a minimum (sound
proof room with no light) - 2. changing or distorting the subjects
environment (may hear a constant buzzing) - 3. a monotonous environment, with no change in
stimuli
43Sensory Deprivation in Adults
- Standard symptoms (depending on type of
deprivation) - Problems thinking clearly and concentrating, and
score low on intelligence tests - Difficulty counting above 20
- Hallucinate
44Sensory Deprivation in Infants
- When infants are deprived at critical stages of
development, they may never develop normal
abilities - Orphanage babies vs. Nursing home babies