Sensation and Perception. Preassement to Sensation and Perception.

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Sensation and Perception

Transcript of Sensation and Perception. Preassement to Sensation and Perception.

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Sensation and Perception

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Preassement to Sensation and

Perception

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Question 1

You can see color in your peripheral vision

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FALSE

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Question 2

Receptor cells allow you interpret what is going on your world

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TRUE

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Question 3

Sensation refers to the process of getting information from the world to our brain.

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TRUE

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Question 4

If you stay in a hot tub it will seem as hot as it did when you first got in it. Sensory adaptation refers to the decline in sensitivity to a constant stimuli.

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FALSE

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Question 5

Our interpretations of the world are due to our personal sensations.

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FALSE

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Question 6

The colored part of the eye, which is actually a ring of muscles that controls the size of the pupil, is called the iris

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TRUE

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Question 7

The eardrum is interprets sound waves for the brain so that we can hear.

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FALSE

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Question 8

People judge people based on what groups they belong

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TRUE

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Question 9

On a clear, dark night we can see a candle flame 30 miles away.

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TRUE

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Question 10

Advertisers are able to shape our buying habits through subliminal messages

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FALSE

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Question 11

If we stare at a green square for a while and then look at a white sheet of paper, we can see red

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TRUE

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Question 12

If we close our eyes and hold our nose, we cannot taste the difference between an apple and a raw potato.

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TRUE

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Question 13

If required to look through a pair of glasses that turns the world upside down, we soon adapt and coordinate our movements without difficulty.

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TRUE

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Question 14

If people are told that an infant is “David”, they are likely to see “him” as bigger and stronger that if the same infant is called “Diana.”

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TRUE

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Question 15

Laboratory evidence clearly indicates that some people do have ESP

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FALSE

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Our Essential Questions!

How do sensations and perceptions differ? How do the senses transform information

into brain messages? What is the nature of attention?

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Grab a scrap sheet of paper

Write down your definition of sensationperception

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Let’s brainstorm…

Sensation Perception

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Sensation

The process by which our sensory systems (eyes, ears, and other sensory organs) and nervous system receive stimuli from the environment

A person’s awareness of the world

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Perception

The process of integrating, organizing and interpreting sensations.

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Bottom-Up Processing

Information processing that focuses on the raw material entering through the eyes, ears, and other organs of sensation

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Top-Down Processing

Top-Down Processing: expectations and experiences influence how

we interpret incoming sensory information

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Sensation v Perception

Complete the worksheet

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The Major Senses

7 major senses Vision (most studied) Hearing Touch Smell Taste Vestibular Kinesthetic

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuYrPB2i-_8

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The Riddle of Separate Sensations

Sense receptors specialized cells

unique to each sense organ that respond to a particular form of sensory stimulation

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Sensory Receptors – An Example

When you bite into a crisp apple, you hear the crunch, you taste the sweetness, you feel the smooth skin, you see the red, and you smell the aroma.

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Receptor Cells

Each of the seven senses is specifically coded to only take in one type of stimulus, whether it be light waves, sound waves, smell, taste, or touch.

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What Does That Mean?

Turn to your neighbor and tell them what sensation means.

What is with those blasted receptor cells as well… explain what they do

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Principles of Sensation

TransductionAbsolute thresholdDifference thresholdSensory adaptation

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TransductionThe process by

which a form of physical energy is converted into a coded neural signal that can be processed by the nervous system.

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What is a Threshold?

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Threshold

An edge or a boundaryWalking into the room – on one side

you are in the room on the other you are outside of the room

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Absolute Threshold

The smallest possible strength of a stimulus that can be detected half the time.

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Absolute Threshold Example (1)

Taste: 1 gram of table salt in 500 liters of water – the minimum needed to taste something

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Absolute Threshold (2)

Vision: A candle flame on a clear night, 30 miles away – the minimum needed to see it. Doesn’t mean that you can make out what it is

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Just Noticeable Difference Threshold

The minimum difference that a person can detect between two stimuli 50% of the time.

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Examples

When you can detect the difference in volume of music

When you can detect the difference in pressure on your arm

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Weber’s Law

The greater the magnitude of the stimulus, the larger the difference must be in order to be noticed

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Weber’s Law Example If you are carrying 20 lbs. and add 5

lbs., it’s noticeable. If you are carrying 100 pounds and add 5 pounds, it may not be noticeable. You need to add 10 lbs. to 100

pounds to make it noticeable.

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Weber’s Law Lab

In groups of 3, follow the directions and complete the lab

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Sensory AdaptationWhen exposed to a stimuli over

a period of time there will be a diminished sensitivity to it

If a stimulus is constant and unchanging, eventually a person may fail to respond to it

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Example of Sensory Adaptation

A hot tub – after a certain period of time no longer seems as hot

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The Nature of Attention

Where does attention come into play here?

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Hypothetical Situation

What would happen if we had no filter between sensation and perception?”

Hallway example

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Sensory Overload

Overstimulation of the senses

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Selective hearing

Do you think it exists?

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Selective AttentionFocusing conscious awareness on a

particular stimulus (sense) to the exclusion of others

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Selective Attention Examples

Walking down the hallway – all 5 senses are firing. What grabs your attention?

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Let’s write!

How do sensations and perceptions differ? How do the senses transform information

into brain messages? What is attention? How much control do

we have over our attention?

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Time to get creative!

With your partner, create a poster depicting 3 the following: Sensation Perception Attention Absolute sensory thresholds Sensory overload

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lN4m0t4hkBg