Sensation and Perception Unit 4: AP Psychology
Sensation and Perception Unit 4: AP Psychology
Sensation and Perception Unit 4: AP Psychology
Unit 4
AP Psychology
The Basics
• We do not actually experience the world directly, but
instead we experience it through a series of “filters” we
call senses.
• Transduction: The
sensory process that
converts energy, such as
light or sound waves, into
the form of neural messages.
• The neural impulse carries a code of the sensory
event in a form that can be further processed by
the brain.
Light Waves
Neural Signals
The Process of Transduction
• Transduction begins with the detection by a sensory
neuron of a physical stimulus.
▫ http://jeffmilner.com/backmasking.htm
When you shift your gaze to the birdcage, your visual system
“subtracts” red light from the white light that’s being reflected
from the white background. White light minus red light is blue-
green light.
Continued Processing
• With further processing, the cortex combines
these sensations with memories, motives,
emotions, and sensations to create a visual
world.
A Colorless World
• Despite the way the world appears, color does not
exist outside the brain, because color is a sensation
that the brain creates based on the wavelength of
light striking our eyes.
Vestibular System
Position and Movement
• The kinesthetic sense keeps
track of body parts, relative to
each other.
▫ Kinesthesis provides constant
sensory feedback about what
the muscles in your body are
doing.
• Fortunately, gustatory
receptors are frequently
replaced.
The Skin Senses
•Bottom-Up: Lines, angles and colors…a guy riding a horse through the forest
•Top-Down: We consider the title and direct our attention to aspects that will give
meaning to it.
Perceptual Consistency
• The ability to recognize the same object as
remaining “constant” under changing conditions
is called perceptual consistency.
Poggendorf Illusion
Zollner
Illusion
Muller-Lyer
Illusion
How Many Faces Do You See?
More Illusions at the Perceptual Level
Muller-Lyer Illusion
• One theory for why this illusion exists is that we
unconsciously interpret the lines as 3D images. We see
the ends as angles that point toward us or away from us.
Therefore, we judge the outside corner to be closer and
shorter.
Muller-Lyer Illusion
The Zulus
• This questions was addressed in the 1970s when
scientists took this image to South Africa and the
Zulu people who live in a rounded culture.
Do you see x o x o x
rows or x o x o x
columns? x o x o x
x o x o x
x o x o x
Law of Perceptual Grouping
XO XO XO XO XO
Law of Perceptual Grouping
B
Cultural Influences on Perception
• To most of us, like “A” looks longer. Psychologist says
this may be a result of the culture we have grown up in
which includes structures with long parallel lines that
seem to converge in the distance.
• Concert Show
• Look at it again:
.rat eht saw tac ehT
• Answer:
The cat was the tar.