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Chapter 5 – Sensation & Perception

Chapter 5 – Sensation & Perception. Sensation = reception of stimuli Perception = interpretation of those stimuli. I. Smell & Taste Sensitive by birth Activity level - internal - external. Facial expression Orientation Preference Habituation. Discriminate odors/tastes

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Chapter 5 – Sensation & Perception

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  1. Chapter 5 – Sensation & Perception • Sensation = reception of stimuli • Perception = interpretation of those stimuli

  2. I. Smell & Taste Sensitive by birth • Activity level - internal - external

  3. Facial expression • Orientation • Preference • Habituation

  4. Discriminate odors/tastes - all 4 taste categories (prefer sweet) - many odors • Importance - prefer stimuli related to breastfeeding - enhances survival

  5. II. Touch Reflex responses • shows tactile perception from birth Pain perception grows • born with poor pain perception • develops rapidly

  6. No experience of pain in the womb • Softens birth experience Heart rate • increases in response to pain Crying • specific pain cry • or just more & louder

  7. Importance • Attachment - tactile contact with parent helps build relationship - orphans/preemies with little tactile stimulation fail to develop properly

  8. Learning - by handling object, learn about world - brain structures & body develop

  9. III. Hearing • Good at birth; excellent by 6 months - perfected through exposure to sounds • Head orientation • Activity level

  10. 4 Factors infants can discriminate • Pitch - better at higher pitches “motherese” • Duration - differentiate between sounds of similar duration - helps learn language

  11. Location - improve with experience - test via sound in darkened room • Distance - tell how far something is - reach for noisy object in dark?

  12. Importance • Locate objects • Perceive human speech • Perceive danger

  13. IV. Sight • Fuzzy at birth - improves quickly

  14. Testing Vision • Tracking - following objects with eyes

  15. Optokinetic nystagmus - eye movements when watching a moving object - shows acuity

  16. Scanning - looking at different parts of object • Habituation - look longer at novel stimuli

  17. 4 Factors infants can discriminate • Brightness • Movement • Pattern/rules • Contrast/edges

  18. Importance • Bonding via eye contact • Perceive face pattern • Recognize parents

  19. Color • Rods & cones - rods on periphery: night vision - cones in center: color & day vision • Poor at birth - see black, white, some red - good at 2-3 months

  20. Depth • Sensitive by 2 months - visual cliff 4 visual cues to depth • Kinetic - movement - by 5 months

  21. Binocular - difference in images in left & right eyes - by 7 months • Perspective - lines moving together indicate distance

  22. Texture - less detail & space between objects indicates depth “Texture gradient” - by 7 months

  23. Integration of senses • Vision & touch - if touched hidden object, recognize it visually - by < 6 months • Vision & hearing - look at location of noisy object in dark room - ~ 3 weeks

  24. Ways of Learning I. Habituation • React to new a stimulus • Reaction dulls -> Learn the stimulus = habituation & discriminate from others • Importance - attention to significant threats

  25. II. Classical Conditioning - Pavlov • Unconditioned stimulus & response - US = stimulus that naturally evokes a reaction - UR = the natural reaction • Conditioned stimulus & response - something always occurs just prior to the US (temporal proximity — cue)

  26. - learn the association between the cue and the US - same reaction to the cue (the CS) • Superstitious behavior - perceiving a temporal link that is coincidental - fears, prejudice, phobias

  27. Extinction - to eliminate the CR - present CS many times with no US - people eventually quit responding - but: people resist extinction - violates rules/patterns

  28. Importance - survival behaviors can be classically conditioned - preparedness

  29. III. Operant Conditioning - Skinner • Rewards & punishments ->behavior • Use operant conditioning to measure infants’ perceptions & what infants can learn

  30. IV. Observational Learning - Bandura • Learn by imitating models • Integration of 2+ senses - use of games • Skills, socialization, & language

  31. Do newborns imitate? - newborns sticking out tongue - or not until ~ 8 weeks

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