Perception - Notes
Perception - Notes
What is perception?
Sensation vs Perception
Sensation - initial contact with the external world through our sense
organs
Sensory receptors – cells specialized in transduction.
Perception – interpretation of raw sensory inputs
Rules of interpretation?
Two basic sub-processes: Pattern recognition and attention
Pattern recognition - Perceiving a form in a stimulus
Theories of pattern recognition – complexity of a process that is
automatic and beyond realization
Template matching
Templates - specific patterns stored in memory
A simplistic approach
Criticism
Prototypes
Prototypes are abstract patterns
Feature detection/ Distinctive features
A stimulus as a configuration of some basic features
Gibson (1968, 1969): Letter recognition
Special feature detectors
Geons
Entire shape taken into consideration – three dimensional objects
Geons are simple geometric three-dimensional components
Geons can be combined to produce complex ones.
Issue
Top down or Bottom up?
A en on
Concentration of mental activity
Focus and a margin
Concept of filtering
Role of motivational and expectancy factors
Methods of studying a en on
Divided attention and selective attention
Divided attention
In DA tasks people must attend to several simultaneously active messages
and respond to each
Selective attention
People are confronted with two or more simultaneous tasks and are
required to focus their attention on one while disregarding the other.
Classic study by Cherry (1953): Shadowing and dichotic listening
Cocktail party phenomenon
Stroop Effect
Sensory Thresholds
For any sensation and subsequent perception to take place the stimuli
must first cross a certain sensory threshold (certain minimum
intensity)
Absolute Limen
It has been defined as the magnitude of physical energy that can be
detected 50% of the time.
Variation in AL
Difference Limen
Difference limen - minimum amount of change required in a stimuli, for
it to be detected
Jnd or just noticeable difference
Subliminal Percep on
Stimuli outside conscious awareness
Experimental evidence
Sensory Adapta on
Reduction in sensitivity when stimuli don’t change
Advantages of sensory adaptation
Disadvantages
Object percep on
Internal representation of the world is full of objects
Representation is formed even when some ambiguity is there
Gestalt approach: Perceptual processes operate by grouping visual
elements in the simplest possible manner.
Laws of perceptual organization
Contours in visual form perception
Law of Prägnanz
Proximity
Figure and ground
Closure
Closure
Gap Filling
Similarity
Continuity
Unitary shapes
Superimposition/Overlap
Common Fate
Illusions
When our perception of an object does not match with its true physical
characteristics, we experience an Illusion
Some Illusions are due to physical distortion of the stimuli and others are
due to misinterpretation
Examples: Ponzo illusion, Mϋller –Lyer Illusion
Illusion and size constancy - Explanation in terms of misplaced size
constancy
Ponzo illusion – upper line appears to be longer
Muller – Lyer illusion – Outward pointing arrows (line appears near
Illusion: Active nature of perception
Illusion of Shading
Paradoxical figures
Even though we realize that they are impossible figures, our perceptual
system tries to test the 3-D hypothesis
Perceptual Constancy
The ability to perceive an object as unchanging, despite changes in the
sensory information that reaches our eyes
Size Constancy
We perceive size of objects as constant
Perceptual system takes into account an object’s distance from the
perceiver
Shape Constancy
Perceptual system maintains constancy of shape
Location Constancy
Stationary objects don’t appear to move even though their images on the
retina shift as the viewer moves around.
Brightness Constancy
Visual objects appear constant in their degree of whiteness, grayness, or
blackness
Colour Constancy
Familiar objects retain their colour under a variety of lighting situations
Depth Perception
Retinal images - two-dimensional (three-dimensional world)
Perception of distance (depth) - enables perception in a three-dimensional
way.
Monocular Cues
Linear perspective
Relative Size
Interposition
Texture Gradient
Light and Shadow:
Atmospheric Perspective:
Motion Parallax
Binocular Cues
Binocular cues depend on the movement of both the eyes.
Retinal Disparity
Convergence
Motion Perception
Actual physical movement of the objects in the environment - real
motion.
Perception of motion can also take place in the absence of actual physical
movement in the environment.
Real Motion
Concept of “brain comparator” - comparing muscle movement with that
movement of retinal image .
Apparent Motion
In apparent motion, movement is perceived in the absence of actual
physical movement
Stroboscopic Motion
Autokinetic effect
Induced Motion