Sensation and Perception Flashcards

1
Q

bottom up processing

A

environment or sensory information processing

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2
Q

top down processing

A

information from own knowledge processing

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3
Q

serial processing

A

processes one thing at a time

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4
Q

parallel processing

A

processes many different things at the same time

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5
Q

sensation

A

registering stimulation of the senses

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6
Q

perception

A

processing and interpreting sensory information

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7
Q

cognition

A

using perceived information to learn, classify and comprehend

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8
Q

bottom up perception

A

perception starts with the physical characteristics of stimuli and basic sensory processes

Gibson - ‘direct perception’

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9
Q

top down perception

A

we perceive concepts of our understanding of external stimuli based on past experience and knowledge

Gregory

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10
Q

Gibson direct perception

A

info coming from sensory receptors is enough for perception to be rich and detailed

complex mechanisms not necessary

environment contains sufficient cues to provide context to aid perception
e.g. texture - depth

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11
Q

Perception starts with one of the following ‘changes’

A
  • electromagnetic energy (light/vision)
  • chemical composition (taste)
  • chemical composition (smell)
  • air pressure waves (sound)
  • tissue distortion (touch)
  • gravity and acceleration
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12
Q

perception of changes is detected by different types of receptors

A

vision - photoreceptors
taste - chemoreceptors
smell - chemoreceptors
sound - mechanoreceptors
touch - mechanoreceptors and thermoreceptors
gravity and acceleration - mechanoreceptors

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13
Q

the info detected by receptors then passed on via different pathways

A

vision - photoreceptors - primary visual cortex
taste - chemoreceptors - gustatory cortex
smell - chemoreceptors - olfactory cortex
sound - mechanoreceptors - auditory cortex
touch - mechanoreceptors and thermoreceptors - somatosensory cortex
gravity and acceleration - mechanoreceptors - temporal cortex

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14
Q

sensation to brain pathway

A

environmental stimulus >
receptors >
intermediate neurons >
thalamus*: neuron mass in middle of brain >
receiving area in cortex >
secondary (associative) cortex >
higher cortex

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15
Q

Transduction

A

conversion of environmental energy into nerve signals

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16
Q

Feedback

A
  • feedback projections from different parts of the brain towards the more sensory parts of the brain
  • help modulate our experience
  • keep some of our experiences more stable
17
Q

Gregory

A

perception is not simply determined by stimulus patterns

it is a dynamic searching for the best interpretation of the available data

18
Q

Ways to investigate perception and sensation

A
  • staining
  • single-cell recordings (electrophysiology)
  • fMRI
  • Lesion studies
  • ERP from EEG
  • optical imaging/near infra-red spectroscopy (NIRS)
  • psychophysics
  • illusions and introspection
  • computational modelling
  • single-cell recording
19
Q

single-cell recording

A
  • action potentials of neurons are recorded with microelectrodes inserted close to cell
  • requires section of skull to be removed
  • useful for identifying cells which are selective for certain features
20
Q

virtual lesions - TMS

A
  • pulses of magnetic energy disrupt activity in a small part of the brain for a short period
21
Q

psychophysics

A

quantifying the relationship between physical stimuli and the psychological response

absolute/detection threshold vs difference threshold

22
Q

absolute/detection threshold

A

smallest stimulus needed for detection

e.g., min concentration of flavour you can taste

23
Q

difference threshold

A

smallest difference between two stimuli that can be detected - the ‘just-noticeable difference (JND)’

e.g. the min diff between 2 colours that you can see

24
Q

global form task

A

which quadrant has a shape in it

25
Q

biological motion task

A

videos of dots moving - does it or does it not look like a person walking

autistic children find this harder