1 / 25

Perception Chapter 5

Perception Chapter 5. What is Perception?. Organization of information to make it useful. Psychophysical Approach. Psychophysics – behavioral aspects of a response to stimuli Difference threshold – degree of change in a stimulus necessary for a person to detect the difference.

malini
Télécharger la présentation

Perception Chapter 5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Perception Chapter 5

  2. What is Perception? • Organization of information to make it useful

  3. Psychophysical Approach • Psychophysics – behavioral aspects of a response to stimuli • Difference threshold – degree of change in a stimulus necessary for a person to detect the difference

  4. Psychophysical Approach • Signal-detection theory - sensitivity to stimuli • Physical condition • Motivation • Mood • Attitude

  5. Perceptual Constancies • Our brain becomes a storehouse of knowledge about details • Size, shape and color • Memories play a role in interpreting new stimuli

  6. Four Constancies • 1. Size • 2. Shape • 3. Brightness • 4. Color

  7. Perceptual Organization • Constructionist View • The brain constructs a perception out of many individual sensations

  8. Gestalt Psychologists • Max Wertheimer • Whole is more important than the sum of the parts • Each part affects every other

  9. Gestalt Laws of Perception • 1. Law of Proximity – tendency to group things together that are close to one another

  10. Gestalt Laws of Perception • 2. Law of Similarity – group things together that have some visual element in common, such as size, shape, or color.

  11. Gestalt Laws of Perception • 3. Law of Continuation – tendency to see interrupted lines as continuous lines

  12. Gestalt Laws of Perception • 4. Law of Closure – Tendency to fill in missing details to complete a figure

  13. Figure and Ground • 3 Principles • 1. The figure is more “thinglike” and more memorable than the ground • 2. The figure is seen as being in front of the ground • 3. The ground is seen as unformed material and seems to extend behind the figure

  14. Bodily Depth Cues • Monocular cues – one eye • Binocular cues – two eyes • 1. Accommodation – change in the shape of the lens that varies with distance (1 eye) • 2. Convergence – the way the eyes rotate inward and outward with changes in distance (2 eyes) • 3. Binocular disparity – difference between the images provided by each eye

  15. Pictorial Depth Cues • Monocular cues • Give a two-dimensional painting, photograph, or movie the illusion of depth where none exists.

  16. Pictorial Depth Cues • 1. Linear perspective – parallel lines appear to converge as they move away from you • 2. Relative size – objects that are known to be the same size will convey depth if one is smaller than the other • 3. Relative height – objects that are higher in a scene are usually perceived as being more distant

  17. Pictorial Depth Cues • 4. Overlap – a sensation of depth is created when one object partially blocks another • 5. Texture – changes in texture can convey depth • 6. Atmospheric (aerial)- distant objects tend to look less sharp than close objects • 7. Relative motion – objects that are close to the car seem to be moving by quickly, while objects in the distance appear to move slowly

  18. Perception of Motion • Different kinds of movement: • A figure moving against a stationary background • Objects at rest against a moving background • Objects moving at different speeds in relation to each other • Observer’s own movements in relation to his/her surroundings • Induced movement • perception of movement of an object that is not moving

  19. Illusions • Muller-Lyer Illusion • Which line appears longer?

  20. Illusions • Ponzo Railroad Track Illusion • Which of the two horizontal lines on the track appear longer?

  21. Illusions • The Necker Cube • The cubes seem to shift and another side seems closer to you. • Then it shifts back again

  22. Illusions • The Boring Figure • Designed by E.G. Boring • Ambiguous figure • Young girl/old woman

  23. Illusions • The Ames Room • Albert Ames • Appears to be a normal room • Actually shaped so the left corner is almost twice as far from the viewer as the right corner • The viewer perceives the nearer person as being much larger than the other, although both are exactly the same height

  24. Illusions What do you see?

  25. Illusions

More Related