5 Sensation and Perception 2
5 Sensation and Perception 2
5 Sensation and Perception 2
Perception
EMAAN RANGOONWALA
CLASS 6
Agenda
Gestaltists proposed laws of organization that specify how people perceive form
They say we organize sensory information based on:
Similarity
Proximity
Closure
Continuation and direction
Figure-Ground
Similarity
The tendency to perceive things that look similar to each other as being part of the
same group.
Closure
The tendency to complete figures that are incomplete.
Continuation and direction
Gestalt principle stating that smooth, flowing lines are more readily perceived
than choppy, broken lines.
Figure–ground - the tendency to perceive objects, or figures, as existing on a
background.
Figure is perceived as distinct from the background.
Figure is closer to the viewer than the background
Reversible figures - visual illusions in which the figure and ground can be
reversed.
Gestalt Organizational Principles
Perceptual Constancy
The tendency for the environment to be perceived as remaining the same even with
changes in sensory input
Size constancy
The tendency to interpret an object as always being the same actual size, regardless
changes on the retinal image.
Shape constancy
The tendency to interpret the shape of an object as being constant, even when its shape
changes on the retina.
Brightness constancy
The tendency to perceive the apparent brightness of an object as the same even when the
light conditions change.
Shape Constancy
Errors in Perception
The “devil’s tuning fork” has three prongs . . . or does it have two?
Try to reproduce the drawing on a
piece of paper
Impact of Culture on 2D and 3D images
Narcissism – Video
Phobia – Video
Extrasensory Perception
ESP refers to the ability to perceive stimuli that are outside the
5 senses
Telepathy: the ability to read minds
Clairvoyance: the ability to perceive objects or events beyond normal
sensory contact
Precognition: the ability to predict the future
Psychokinesis: the ability to move objects
Video