Title: Cognitive processes
1Cognitive processes
Engineering Psychology
- perception sensation attention thinking
imagination memory creativity problem
solving
Jakub Jura Jakub.jura_at_fs.cvut.cz http//users.fs.c
vut.cz/jura/ing-psych/
2What is Cognitive?
- From latin cognoscere getting to know
- Distinguish emotional and rational
- Descartes Cogito ergo sum.
Mental processes mediate between stimulus and
response.
3Cognitive processes
- Base Cognitive processes
- Perception
- Sensation
- Attention
- Thinking
- Imagination
- Memory
- Learning
- Advanced Cognitive processes
- Creativity
- Problem solving
4Sensation
- Sensation is about sense organ and basic
processes on this level. - Perception is about creating whole percept.
5Sensation
Perception Percept Sence Organ
Visual Perception Image Eye
Auditive Perception Sound Ear
Gustatory Perception Taste Taste Buds
Olfactory Perception Smell Nose
Haptic Perception Touch on skin Nociceptors
Proprioception Body position Proprioceptor
Human Feromon Affection / antipathy Vomero-Nasal Organ
Magnetoception Impression of north Unknown
6 Haptic sensibility
- Tactile compasses
- The brain projection zone.
- Skin surface and brain surface.
7Sensation Delusions
Lateral Inhibition Efect
8Blind spot
- Close the right eye. Leave your head in the
central position. - Look to the cross, by the left eye.
- Approach your head to the paper.
- The circle disappears in a given distance.
9Negative afterimage
10Perception
- Perception is perception of diference.
- Sensuals limits
- Gestalt law
- Multistable figures
- Invariance in perception
- WeberFechner law
11Perception Delusionss
Which of these circles is bigger?
12Perception Delusionss
Lighter
Darker
13Perception Delusionss
14(No Transcript)
15Is anything here?
16Gestalt Laws
- Proximity
- We tend to group nearby objects.
- Similarity
- We tend to group objects with similar properties
- Closure
- We are so accustomed to seeing closure that we
sometimes close things that aren't.
17Gestalt Laws
- Good Continuation
- We tend to assign objects to an entity that is
defined by smooth lines or curves - Pregnantz
- We tend to good shape
18Experiment 2
19Multistable perception
- Mind separate figure and backgroun.
- Unstably between two or more alternative
interpretations. - Since you see both, you cant see both.
- Changing may be under control only partially.
20Invariance in perception
- Objects are recognized independent of rotation,
translation, scale, elastic deformations,
different lighting, and different component
features.
21Neisser's cycle of perceptionCognitive Ecology
Actual world
Object available information
Samples
Modify
Schema of environment
Exploration
Locomotion and action
Cognitive map
Directs
22Psychophysics
- Ernest Heinrich Weber (17951878)
- Gustav Theodor Fechner (18011887)
- Stimulus ? Percept
- Stimulus ? Sensation ? Percept
23Weber law
- Ernest Heinrich Weber (17951878)
- Experiment with weight difference
- Just noticeable difference (jnd) between two
weights was approximately proportional to the
mass of the weights - ?I kw I
- I Base intensity (Total weight)
- ?I Discrimination threshold (Weight difference)
- kw Constatnt (Weber Fraction)
- We cant perceive the intensity of stimulus
directly, but in relation to the reference value.
24Fechner law
- Gustav Theodor Fechner (18011887)
- Dependence of sense impression on the intensity
of stimulus is logarithm. - P k ln (S)
- P percept
- k constant
- S stimulus
25Experiment 1
- Dependence of sense impression on the intensity
of stimulus
- Sound
- Light
- Procedure
- Set intensity to basic level (L)
- Increase intensity up to one degree (L1)
- Remember this degree and set intensity up to L2,
L3, Ln
Impresion
Sensum
26Fechner law
27WeberFechner Law
- ?P k (?S/S)
- dP k dS/S,
- P k ln (S/S0)
- P percept
- k constant
- S stimulus
- S0 lower possible stimulus
28Weber-Fechner law
- Weber-Fechner principle in the acoustics
- LI10 log (I/I0)
- Lp20 log (pe/pe0)
- L Level of intensity
- I Intensity
- P Aacoustic pressure
- I0, pe0 ... Minimal perceived value