1 / 39

Unit 5: Sensation, Perception and States of Consciousness

Unit 5: Sensation, Perception and States of Consciousness.

jimn
Télécharger la présentation

Unit 5: Sensation, Perception and States of Consciousness

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. WHS AP Psychology Unit 5: Sensation, Perception and States of Consciousness Essential Task 5-5:  Describe general principles of perception/ top down processing (organizing and integrating sensation) that promote stable awareness of the external world with specific attention to the Gestalt principles of figure/ground, closure, proximity, connectedness, similarity and the mono and binocular cues for depth perception).

  2. Perceptual Constancies Gestalt Principles We are here Basic Principles Visual Illusions Depth Perception Perception Vision Hearing Sensation Theories The Eye Theories Other Senses The Ear Smell Pain Taste

  3. Circadian Rhythm Stages/REM Disorders Hidden Observer Actor Sleep Hypnosis Dreams Meditation Waking Consciousness States of Consciousness Altered States of Consciousness Drug-Altered Consciousness Daydreaming and Fantasy Substance Abuse Stimulants Depressants Hallucinogens

  4. Essential Task 5-5: Outline • Describe general principles of perception/top down processing • Gestalt principles of: • Figure-ground • closure • proximity • connectedness, • similarity • Depth perception • Monocular cues • Binocular cues

  5. Our brains are meaning machines • We organize the sensory information coming into our brains. • We make assumptions about the sensory information. Oftentimes our perception is greater than the sum of the parts actually presented to our senses.

  6. Sidewalk chalk art 3D art

  7. Gestalt Psychology • From the German word meaning ‘the whole’ • Studied human perceptual self-organizing tendencies. • Found that the brain creates a coherent perceptual experience that is more than simply the sum of the available sensory information • AND it does this in predictable ways • So predictable that artists can exploit our common perceptions to do things like 3D Art

  8. First step in visual PERCEPTION • Determine Figure from the background (figure-ground) • We organize the visual field into objects (figures) that stand out from their surroundings (ground).

  9. Examples of figure-ground What you make the figure and what you back the background determines your perception

  10. Examples of figure-ground

  11. Figure-ground

  12. Figure-ground examples

  13. We organize by closure

  14. Closure

  15. We organize by Proximity

  16. Proximity

  17. Proximity and Closure

  18. We organize by Similarity

  19. Similarity

  20. We organize by similarity

  21. Continuity

  22. Connectedness The Principle of Common Region states that objects that are within the same region are perceptually grouped together. 

  23. They are predictable and therefore they can be exploited.

  24. How do we perceive forms? • Perceptual Constancy • Our tendency to perceive objects as stable and unchanging despite changing sensory information • Size constancy • Shape constancy • Color constancy

  25. Depth Perception Depth perception enables us to judge distances. Gibson and Walk (1960) suggested that human infants (crawling age) have depth perception. Even newborn animals show depth perception. Visual Cliff

  26. Binocular Cues • Depth perception that you have because you have two eyes! • Retinal Disparity • Convergence

  27. Binocular Cues: Retinal Disparity • Retinal disparity: Images from the two eyes differ. • While focusing far away try touching your fingers about 5 inches directly in front of your eyes. You will see a “finger sausage” • The amount of disparity (difference) between the two images can be used as a cue for distance • Try holding up two fingers one in front of the other. Focus on the front one (you should now see two images of the back one). Now move the back one away from, then back towards you, while still focusing on the front one.

  28. Binocular Cues: Convergence Convergence:Neuromuscular cues. When two eyes move inward (towards the nose) to see near objects and outward (away from the nose) to see faraway objects.

  29. Monocular Cues Relative Size:If two objects are similar in size, we perceive the one that casts a smaller retinal image to be farther away.

  30. Monocular Cues Interposition:Objects that occlude (block) other objects tend to be perceived as closer.

  31. Monocular Cues Relative Clarity:Because light from distant objects passes through more light than closer objects, we perceive hazy objects to be farther away than those objects that appear sharp and clear.

  32. Monocular Cues Texture Gradient:Closer objects tend to have a courser texture than to far way objects

  33. Monocular Cues Relative motion:Objects closer to a fixation point move faster and in opposing direction to those objects that are farther away from a fixation point, moving slower and in the same direction.

  34. Monocular Cues Linear Perspective:Parallel lines, such as railroad tracks, appear to converge in the distance. The more the lines converge, the greater their perceived distance.

  35. Monocular Cues Light and Shadow:Nearby objects reflect more light into our eyes than more distant objects. Given two identical objects, the ones that are shaded on top are seen as “sticking out toward us”

  36. Perception of Movement • Apparent movement • Illusion that still objects are moving • Autokinetic illusion • Perceived motion of a single object due to eye movements on an ‘impoverished background’ • Stroboscopic motion (Click here) • Created by a rapid series of still pictures • Phi phenomenon • Apparent motion created by lights flashing in sequence

More Related