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MYERS FOR AP, UNIT 4 Sensation & Perception

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Page 1: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

MYERS FOR AP, UNIT 4

Sensation & Perception

Page 2: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

DO NOW

Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

Page 3: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

AP OBJECTIVES

Discuss basic principles of sensory transduction, including absolute threshold, difference threshold, signal detection, and sensory adaptation.

Discuss the role of attention in behavior

Explain the role of top-down processing in producing vulnerability to illusion.

Page 4: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

KEY TERMS & MORE KEY TERMS Sensation, p. 116 Perception, p. 116 Bottom-up

processing, p. 116 Top-down

processing, p. 116 Selective

attention, p. 117 Inattentional

blindness, p. 118 Change

blindness, p. 119 Psychophysics, p. 120 Absolute

threshold, p. 120 Signal detection

theory, p. 121 Subliminal, p. 121 Priming, p. 121 Difference

threshold, p. 122 Weber’s law, p. 123 Sensory

adaptation, p. 123 Transduction, p. 124 Wavelength, p. 125 Hue, p. 125 Intensity, p. 125 Pupil, p. 126 Iris, p. 126 Lens, p. 126 Retina, p. 126 Accommodation, p. 1

26 Rods, p. 126 Cones, p. 126 Optic nerve, p. 126 Blind spot, p. 127 Fovea, p. 127

Page 5: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

Feature detectors, p. 129

Parallel processing, p. 130

Young-Helmholtz trichromatic (three-color) theory, p. 132

Opponent-process theory, p. 133

Audition, p. 134 Frequency,  p. 134 Pitch, p. 134 Middle ear, p. 135 Cochlea, p. 135 Inner ear, p. 135 Place theory, p. 137 Frequency

theory, p. 137 Conduction hearing

loss, p. 138 Sensorineural

hearing loss, p. 138 Cochlear

implant, p. 138 Kinesthesis, p. 142 Vestibular

sense, p. 142 Gate-control

theory, p. 143 Sensory

interaction, p. 147 Gestalt, p. 151 Figure-ground, p. 151 Grouping, p. 152 Depth

perception, p. 153 Visual cliff, p. 153 Binocular cues, p. 153 Retinal

disparity, p. 153 Monocular

cues, p. 154 Phi

phenomenon, p. 156 Perceptual

constancy, p. 156 Color

constancy, p. 158 Perceptual

adaptation, p. 160 Perceptual set, p. 161 Extrasensory

perception (ESP), p. 166

Parapsychology, p. 166

Page 6: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

KEY PEOPLE

Richard Axel Georg von Bekesy Linda Buck Gustav Fechner Eleanor Gibson Ewald Hering David Hubel Harry McGurk Ronald Melzack

James Randi (again)

Herman von Helmholtz

Richard Walk Patrick Wall Ernst Weber Torsten Wiesel Thomas Young

Page 7: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

TOP-DOWN PROCESSING Bottom-up processing

Begins with sensory receptors and heads for the brain.

We process this way when we don’t know something; we start at the bottom and work our way up.

Top-down processing Information that a person brings to the situation

that influences both perception and recognition We process this way when we already know

things. We start at the top and integrate information

An example: Stereotyping uses previous expectations to make judgments

Page 8: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

DISCUSSION

But wait! Stereotyping is bad, right? Why is top-down processing so important?

What are some of the pros and cons of selective attention?

How is selective attention related to the evolutionary perspective?

Give examples of when you were so caught up in doing something that you missed something you should have attended to, or when the environment was so distracting that you couldn’t focus.

Page 9: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

SAY WHAT???

Aoccdrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn’t mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.

Page 10: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

DO NOW: HOW SENSITIVE ARE YOU?

Complete the handout!Highly sensitive persons: Are more aware of all the possibilities in a situation. Naturally process information from the environment

more carefully and study it thoroughly before acting. Are more aware of subtleties in their surroundings Are often intellectually gifted, unusually creative and

productive workers, and attentive and thoughtful in close relationships.

Are more easily overwhelmed when in a highly stimulating environment.

Become exhausted when bombarded by multiple stimuli and need more down time to recover.

Source: Aron, E. N. (1999). The highly sensitive person: How to thrive when the world overwhelms you. New York: Random House.

Page 11: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

SELECTIVE ATTENTION EXPERIMENT!

Human Earphones We need four volunteers! And two textbooks Dichotic listening

Page 12: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

INATTENTIONAL AND CHANGE BLINDNESS

Umbrella video – inattentional blindness

How could this get us in trouble in real life?

Change Blindness videos:

Page 13: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

FIELD-DEPENDENT OR INDEPENDENT?

Page 14: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

Herman Witkin devised the Embedded Figures Test(EFT) to measure field dependence–independence and has studied this for more than 30 years)•Field Dependent: Difficulty locating hidden figures within complex surroundings (prefer social sciences and education)•Field Independent: Easily locatinghidden figures (tend to favor natural sciences, math and engineering)•Scores on field dependence–independence arerelatively stable over time.

How fast can you find the 12 items?

Page 15: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

IMPORTANT DETAILS (NIB)

Gustav Fechner developed three methods of experimental measurement used to study sensory phenomena: Method of limits (minimal stimulus gradually

increasing = JND) Method of right and wrong: Present either

single stimuli at the threshold or pairs of stimuli that are very similar, and the participant responds “yes” or “no” if they perceive a difference or not.

Method of adjustment: Adjust a comparison stimulus until identical to the standard stimulus

Page 16: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

SIGNAL DETECTION

So WHAT? Who cares? Why does this matter, especially since

absolute thresholds and difference thresholds vary?

Answer: It’s critical to fields where attention to detail amid environmental distractions is paramount (air traffic controllers, security screeners, law enforcement, and even for YOU, when you drive, for example.)

Page 17: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

WEBER’S LAW DEMO

We need: Three quarters Two envelopes A shoe A volunteer (maybe one with a shoe?)

Application to marketing psychology: You’re a salesperson. Imagine a customer who wants to buy a three-piece suit and a sweater. To get Which would you try to sell first and why?

Page 18: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

THRESHOLD + SUBLIMINALS

http://www.garyfisk.com/anim/threshold.swf

DQ: What does the research say about how subliminal messages influence (or don’t)?

Page 19: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

SENSORY ADAPTATION Why don’t objects disappear from

view after prolonged exposure? Demo #1—The vanishing

Stare at a stationary object Close one eye Gently push in on the outside corner of the open eye You should notice the object disappear briefly

Demo #2—Point of fixation: Choose a partner Partner #1 stares at a stationary object. Partner #2 stares at Partner #1’s eyes from the side. Switch partners What did you observe?

Page 20: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

VISION

Page 21: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

VISION: STIMULUS INPUT= LIGHT ENERGY

Transduction (transform electromagnetic energy to neural messages)

We only “see” a small band of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Page 22: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

THE PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF WAVES

These properties apply to audition (hearing), too: • The higher the frequency, the higher the pitch and

vice versa• The greater the amplitude the louder the sound and

vice versa

Page 23: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

THE EYEDo Now: Sketch the eye into your notes describe, and how it works

DQ: What do you suppose causes “red eye,” when flash pictures are taken?

Page 24: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

THE DETAILS OF NEURAL MESSAGING

Page 25: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

RODS & CONES

Light demo Rods & Cones demo One to try at home: In a dark room

(or outside) focus on an image or object. Notice how detailed the object appears. Then focus your foveal vision just to the side of the image or object you were looking at. You should notice that the image becomes more detailed

Page 26: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

STUFF YOU SHOULD KNOW

How the eye works with the thalamus and the occipital lobes (review)

Feature detector cells The significant difference in

number and function of rods and cones

How parallel processing works with vision (color, motion, form and depth)

What if you could not perceive motion?

Page 27: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

HERMANN GRID (WHY?)

Page 29: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

COLOR THEORY

Young-Helmholtz Trichromatic theory

Herring’s opponent-process theory

Afterimages

Page 30: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

STARE AT THE DOT IN THE IMAGE BELOW

Page 31: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

WHAT DO YOU SEE (BLINK A BIT)

Page 32: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

Stare at the tricolored dots on the photo for 30 seconds; then shift your gaze to the X on the other side of the screen. Blink several times. What do you see?

Page 33: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

A QUESTION FOR THE AGES:

How do I know if I am seeing the same color as someone else?

Answer: The wavelength determines color, so in a properly functioning eye, it will be the same, although color shades can vary significantly and people may name them differently.

Page 35: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

HEARING (AUDITION)

Do now: Describe how our ears convert soundwaves to neural impulses. Draw if it helps!

Page 36: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

NOTE: ALTERNATIVE NAMES

The hammer is also called malleusThe anvil is also called incusStirrups are also called stapes

Page 37: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

ANOTHER KEY QUESTION:

DQ: Why does our voice sound unfamiliar when we hear it recorded?

Answer: We hear the sound conducted by sound waves and the sound carried directly to the auditory nerve by bone conduction

How ears work: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-bKy02f1pD4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxcbppCX6Rk

Sound location demo

Page 38: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

KEY QUESTIONS:

What causes hearing loss and what are the two main types?

How loud is too loud? (What is the general rule?)

How (mechanically) do we perceive loudness?

How do we understand pitch perception? Know the difference between place and frequency theory

How do we locate sounds?

Page 39: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

WHAT ABOUT TOUCH?

What are the four basic skin sensations?

What is the difference between kinesthesis and vestibular sense?

Demo: Stand on one foot with your eyes open Stand on one foot with your eyes closed Really brave volunteer? (plus spotters)

Spin around in a circle six times, and then try to stand on one foot with your eyes closed.

Page 40: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

PAIN IS WEIRD AND WE DON’T UNDERSTAND IT COMPLETELY

Do Now: Why would it be bad not to feel pain? Do you think people who don’t feel pain have normal life expectancy? Why or why not?

Nociceptors – respond to hurtful pressure, temperature and chemicals

There are different kinds of “pain personalities:” dysfunctional, interpersonally distressed and adaptive copers

Placebos can relieve pain. So can hypnosis, biofeedback, physiotherapy, ultrasound, acupuncture, relaxation, electrical stimulation and massage.

P.S. Be familiar with the Gate-Control Theory (Mezack and Wall). It is SO biopsychosocial

Page 41: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

TASTE!

Well, for starters… This taste map is bogus! See for yourself Plus they forgot umami Mmmm… kisses Check out your book for more details and

fun facts. Here’s one that’s not in the book: Whether

we like something or not depends on what we THINK. (Pilner & Pelchat study)

Page 42: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

HOW WE SMELL

Page 43: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

SMELL!

Do now: 8 little vials are going around with scents inside. Smell quietly and try to identify all of them (in your notebook, not out loud)

We have 10 to 20 million olfactory receptors that can identify 10,000 odors

Our senses of taste and smell decline over time Top-down processing (associations, etc.) help

us decide if things smell good or bad Gender demo: We need two main volunteers, a

blindfold and everyone else to participate. (Modified Wallace Experiment)

http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/but-not-simpler/2013/11/12/green-eggs-and-ham-dont-let-it-waste-what-doctor-seuss-knew-about-the-science-of-taste/

Page 44: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

GESTALT

The unified whole is different from the sum of the parts.

Page 45: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

GESTALT INCLUDES THESE ELEMENTS:

Page 46: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

GESTALT: FIGURE & GROUND

Page 47: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

DEPTH PERCEPTION

Monocular Cues activity with ball pit balls Photo walk (choose a partner & make sure you

have a camera). Take a 15-minute walk and look for monocular cues (see page 155 for reminders) Relative height Linear perspective Relative size Interposition Relative motion Light and shadow

Monocular cues rely on previous knowledge to make sense. Top-down processing, again!

Page 48: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

CAREFULLY REVIEW!

Phi Phenomenon

Perceptual constancy: Shape and size constancy Lightness constancy Color constancy

Page 49: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

TROXLER FADING AND THE PHI PHENOMENONSTARE AT THE + IN THE MIDDLE AND NOTICE

WHAT HAPPENS

Page 50: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

The context helps us to perceive the stimulus in the simplest manner

Page 51: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

Again, the context helps us to perceive the stimulus in the simplest manner

Page 52: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

Notice that you can only perceive the center stimulus one way at any given moment

Page 53: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?
Page 54: Sensation & Perception.  Which of your senses do you think would be the hardest to live without? Why?

SMELL