Sensation - Senses and Perception PDF
Document Details
Uploaded by Deleted User
Tags
Summary
This document details the different types of sensation and perception in humans. It covers various senses such as sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch, and explains concepts like absolute and differential thresholds. It also delves into the factors influencing perception.
Full Transcript
**SENSATION** - **Definition**: The process of detecting information from the external world through the sense organs. - **Stimulus**: Any form of energy or event that activates a sense organ (e.g., light, sound, chemicals, touch). - **Characteristics of Sensation**: 1. **Abso...
**SENSATION** - **Definition**: The process of detecting information from the external world through the sense organs. - **Stimulus**: Any form of energy or event that activates a sense organ (e.g., light, sound, chemicals, touch). - **Characteristics of Sensation**: 1. **Absolute threshold**: The minimum amount of energy required to activate a sense organ. Stimuli below this level are not detected. 2. **Differential threshold**: The smallest difference in stimulation required to detect a change in stimulus intensity. 3. **Sensory adaptation**: A decrease in sensitivity to a constant stimulus over time, leading to a reduced ability to sense that stimulus. **THE SENSORY SYSTEMS** **A. Visual Sense (Sight)** - **Definition**: The ability to detect light and interpret visual stimuli using the eyes. - **Stimulus**: Light, which is a form of electromagnetic energy, with wavelengths between 400-700 nm visible to humans. - **Parts of the Eye**: - **Cornea**: Transparent outer membrane of the eye that helps focus light. - **Aqueous humor**: Fluid between the cornea and the lens. - **Pupil**: The opening in the iris that regulates the amount of light entering the eye. - **Iris**: The colored part of the eye; controls pupil size. - **Lens**: Focuses light onto the retina by changing its shape. - **Retina**: The light-sensitive layer at the back of the eye that contains photoreceptors (rods and cones). - **Rods**: Photoreceptors responsible for night vision and black-and-white vision. - **Cones**: Photoreceptors responsible for color vision and daylight vision. - **Fovea**: The center of the retina where vision is sharpest. - **Blind spot**: The area where the optic nerve leaves the eye; no photoreceptors present. **B. Auditory Sense (Hearing)** - **Definition**: The ability to detect sound waves through the ear and interpret auditory information. - **Stimulus**: Sound waves, which are changes in atmospheric pressure causing air molecules to vibrate. - **Parts of the Ear**: - **Outer ear**: Consists of the pinna (external part), auditory canal, and eardrum (tympanic membrane). - **Middle ear**: Contains three ossicles (hammer, anvil, stirrup) that amplify sound vibrations. - **Inner ear**: Includes the cochlea (fluid-filled structure responsible for converting sound waves into nerve impulses) and the organ of corti (contains hair cells that detect sound). **C. Olfactory Sense (Smell)** - **Definition**: The sense that detects airborne chemicals (odors) through receptors in the nasal passages. - **Stimulus**: Airborne chemicals that bind to receptors in the olfactory epithelium. - **Olfactory epithelium**: A layer of tissue in the nasal cavity that contains smell receptors. - **Basic odors**: Fragrant, fruity, spicy, putrid, resinous, and burned. - **Anosmia**: A condition characterized by the inability to perceive smells, often caused by drug reactions or illness. **D. Gustatory Sense (Taste)** - **Definition**: The sense responsible for detecting dissolved substances (taste) through receptors on the tongue. - **Stimulus**: Substances dissolved in saliva that stimulate taste buds. - **Taste buds**: Sensory receptors located in the papillae of the tongue. - **Four primary tastes**: Sweet, sour, bitter, salty. **E. Somesthetic Sense (Skin Senses)** - **Definition**: The sensory system responsible for detecting touch, temperature, and pain through receptors in the skin. - **Receptors**: Sensory cells located in different layers of the skin. - **Touch**: Detects pressure and vibration. - **Temperature**: Detects warmth and cold. - **Pain**: Alerts the body to potential harm or injury. - **Gate-control theory**: Explains how the brain can regulate pain perception by opening or closing neural \"gates.\" **F. Kinesthetic Sense** - **Definition**: The sense responsible for detecting body movement, posture, and orientation through receptors in muscles, joints, and tendons. **G. Vestibular Sense** - **Definition**: The sensory system that detects balance, body position, and motion. - **Receptors**: Located in the semicircular canals and vestibular sacs of the inner ear; responsible for detecting changes in body position and motion (e.g., tilting, moving). **PERCEPTION** - **Definition**: The brain's process of interpreting sensory information to give it meaning. - **Subliminal Perception**: Perception of a stimulus below the conscious awareness threshold. **Factors Influencing Perception:** 1. **Stimulus conditions**: Size, intensity, movement, repetition, contrast of a stimulus. 2. **Personal factors**: Motivation, values, interest. **Principles of Perceptual Organization (Gestalt Psychology):** 1. **Proximity**: Objects close to each other are perceived as a unit. 2. **Similarity**: Similar objects are grouped together. 3. **Good continuation**: We tend to perceive smooth, continuous lines. 4. **Closure**: We mentally fill in gaps to perceive a complete figure. **Perception of Distance:** - **Binocular cues**: Use both eyes to perceive depth and distance (e.g., retinal disparity, convergence). - **Monocular cues**: Use one eye to perceive depth (e.g., linear perspective, relative size, overlap, texture gradient, atmospheric perspective). **Perception of Movement:** - **Real motion**: Actual movement of an object. - **Apparent motion**: 1. **Stroboscopic movement**: Seen in movies through rapid successions of still images. 2. **Autokinetic effect**: A stationary light appears to move in darkness. 3. **Induced movement**: Stationary object appears to move when the background moves. **Visual Illusions:** - **Definition**: Misinterpretations of visual stimuli, leading to false perceptions. - **Examples**: Muller-Lyer illusion, Poggendorf illusion. **Extra-Sensory Perception (ESP):** - **Definition**: Perception without the use of normal sensory processes. 1. **Telepathy**: Transfer of thoughts between individuals. 2. **Precognition**: Perceiving events before they occur. 3. **Clairvoyance**: Gaining information about distant objects or events. 4. **Psychokinesis**: Moving objects without physical contact. 5. **Astral projection**: An out-of-body experience in which a person's consciousness separates from the body and travels.