Sensation & Perception 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the figural cues?

A

regions of the image are more likely to be seen if:
- they are in the front of the image
- at the bottom of the image
- convex
- recognisable

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2
Q

What is the gist of a scene?

A
  • getting an overall impression of what the scene is about
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3
Q

How long do you need for gist perception?

A

about 40 ms???

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4
Q

Function of motion perception

A
  • help break camouflage
  • help attract attention
  • help segregate objects from background
  • help us interpret events
  • help us determine structure of objects
  • help us determine what actions people are performing
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5
Q

What happens when camouflaged animal moves?

A

attention is attracted to it & its camouflage is broken – MOTION ATTRACTS ATTENTION & HELPS US SEGREGATE OBJECTS FROM BACKGROUND

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6
Q

How does motion allow us to interpret events?

A

by seeing how objects interact, you can infer causality relationships & even social relationships

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7
Q

What is kinetic depth effect?

A

determining shape of moving object

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8
Q

What is kinetic depth effect?

A

determining shape of moving object

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9
Q

How does motion allow us to interpret actions?

A
  • static poses are often ambiguous
  • when someone moves, their actions & intentions are often made clear
  • usually demonstrated using point-light walkers
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10
Q

What are point-light walkers?

A
  • created by placing lights on a person’s joints and having them perform an action
  • videoed so only the lights can be see
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11
Q

What is akinetopsia?

A

inability to perceive motion due to brain damage

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12
Q

E.g. of akinetopsia patient

A
  • L.M. had difficulties pouring a cup of tea, crossing the street, following speech
  • could see things had moved but couldn’t see them moving
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13
Q

When do we perceive motion?

A
  • REAL MOTION (actual movement)
  • ILLUSORY MOTION (nothing actually moving e.g. rotating snake illusion)
  • MOTION AFTEREFFECTS
  • INDUCED MOTION – moving background (or moving object) causes a stationary object to appear to move
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14
Q

When does apparent motion occur?

A

when a series of stationary images are presented in succession to give the impression of motion e.g. 2 separate dots on slide

only works if dots are close together + alternation rate is at a good speed

as separation increases alternation rate needs to decrease –> KORTE’S THIRD LAW OF APPARENT MOTION

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15
Q

What is apparent motion mostly insensitive to?

A

colour changes

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16
Q

What can colour be used to do?

A

to disambiguate ambiguous apparent motion

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17
Q

What is induced motion?

A
  • a nearby object or background (usually a large one) either affects the perceived motion of a second object (usually a small one) or causes a second object to appear to move
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18
Q

What is motion aftereffect?

A

When you’ve been driving down a long, straight road, and you suddenly come to a stop, does the road seem to rush away from you? When you look at a waterfall, then glance away, does it seem as though the scenery is flowing upwards? It’s called motion aftereffect, and it’s a kind of visual adaptation.

EXPOSURE TO MOTION IN OPPOSITE DIRECTION

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19
Q

Motion induced change blindness

A
  • can make it harder to notice changes
  • normally colour changes attract attention bc of the transient signals associated with the change (e.g. flicker)
  • however when things are moving there are transient signals associated with all objects not just the ones that are changing
  • thus attention is no longer drawn preferentially to the changing objects so the changes are not noticed
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20
Q

Motion illusions can inform us of. . .

A

the processes underlying motion perception

e.g. the footsteps illusion shows us that contrast affects motion perception

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21
Q

How does motion illusion show that contrast affects motion perception?

A
  • higher contrast objects appear to move faster & lower contrast objects appear to move more slowly
  • could explain why people often underestimate the speed of cars moving through fog..

CONTRAST MAKES THINGS SPEED UP

22
Q

What is the aperture problem?

A
  • If you can’t see the ends of a line, the movement of a line is ambiguous.
  • Consequently, the motion of the line viewed through an aperture is ambiguous and is “captured” by the movement of the terminators (the points where the line joins the aperture)
23
Q

What is the Barber Pole illusion?

A
  • lines curve around a cylinder creating virtual terminators that move vertically
  • lines appear to move vertically
24
Q

Function of colour perception

A
  • help search for things
  • make judgements
  • used to attract mates
  • determine if fruit is ripe
25
Q

opaque object

A

an object that light cannot pass through
reflects light e.g. if it does not absorb red light it will reflect red light

26
Q

transparent object

A

determined by the colour it transmits (e.g. water)

27
Q

Munsell colour system categorizes according to:

A
  • value (lightness)
  • hue (colour)
  • chroma (saturation)
28
Q

Trichromatic theory of vision

A
  • in the retina, there are photoreceptors known as rods & cones
  • rods cannot distinguish b/w colours & are active ONLY AT LOW LIGHT LEVELS
  • normal light conditions: are NOT active
  • (only cones are active in normal light)

LOOK AT RELATIVE EXCITATIONS (for M & L cones since they are similar)

29
Q

Types of cones

A
  • S cones - 419 nm (blue)
  • M cones - 531 m (green)
  • L cones - 558 nm (red)
30
Q

If L cones are most active, the light is primarily. ..

A

red

31
Q

if the S cones are the most active, the
light in primarily. . .

A

blue

32
Q

What will green light activate? (At 500 nm)

A

strongly activate M & L
weakly activate S cones

33
Q

If a patch of light were to activate the S, M, & L cones to the exact same extent, it would look identical to. . .

A

the test field

34
Q

metamers

A

physically different stimuli that appear the same

35
Q

2 types of colour deficiency

A

monochromatism
dichromatism

36
Q

Monochromatism

A
  • usually have no functioning cones ONLY rods
  • are truly colour blind & see world in shades of grey
  • very sensitive to light & must wear dark glasses
  • affects about 1 in 100,000 people
37
Q

Dichromatism

A
  • lack one of the 3 types of cones
  • 3 types of dichromats: protanopes, deuteranopes, tritanopes
38
Q

Protanopes lack. . .

A

L cones
- cant distinguish red & green

39
Q

Deuteranopia lack. . .

A

M cones
- cant distinguish b/w red & green

40
Q

Tritanopia lack . .

A

S cones
- cant distinguish b/w blue & green

41
Q

What are unilateral dichromats?

A

people have normal trichromatic vision in one eye but dichromatic vision in the other - they can give us insight into what dichromats actually experience

42
Q

What colour is the world for protanopes & deuteranopes?

A

shades of blue and yellowish-green

43
Q

What colour is the world for tritanopes?

A

shades of blue & red

44
Q

If you were to mix red & green light, what would you get?

A

yellow light

45
Q

If you were to mix blue & yellow light what would you get?

A

white light

46
Q

Opponent-Process Theory of Colour Vision

A

what colour we perceived is determined not only by the cones in our retina

signals from these cones are processed by the cortex where they are combined into 3 colour opponent channels:
- red-green
- blue-yellow
- white-black

47
Q

Psychophysical evidence for opponent process theory of colour vision

A
  • afterimages
  • impossible colours
48
Q

What does opponent processing explain?

A

the existence of afterimages and why some colour combinations are impossible

49
Q

Colour constancy

A

the light reflected by an object is determined by the product of its reflectance and the illumination

reflectance x illumination = reflected light

50
Q

Why does a green sweater still look green when we place it under red light?

A
  • part of the explanation: we habituate to the colour –> become less sensitive to that colour
  • DISCOUNTING THE ILLUMINANT