Lecture 4 - When perception goes wrong Flashcards

1
Q

Fraser Spiral illusion?

A
  • look at diagram
  • a series of concentric circles
  • misaligned parts (black and white strands within the circles ) distort the perception of the regular pattern (circles)
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2
Q

Jastrow illusion?

A
  • look at diagram
  • objets with a longer radius appear to be shorter
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3
Q

Irradiation illusion?

A
  • look at diagram
  • white square appears to be bigger but they are actually the same size
  • light areas appear to be larger than dark areas because light from a white region irradiates adjacent dark regions
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4
Q

What if the image on the retina is ambiguous?

A
  • the retinal image doesn’t change but we perceive different objects
  • the same feature can be different parts of different objects
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5
Q

Erroneous perception with visual illusions?

A

what we perceive is not always what is represented on our retina

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6
Q

Equivocal perception with ambiguous figures?

A

we perceive different objects from the same retinal image

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7
Q

What did Gibson say?

A

such illusions and figures are carefully constructed to mislead us and do not exist in the real world, they have no ecological validity

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8
Q

What are some examples of real world visual illusions?

A
  • moon illusion
    -> the moon appears larger when it is close to the horizon as compared to when it is high up in the sky
  • waterfall illusion
    -> motion aftereffect: after observation of motion in one direction (waterfall for 30-60 seconds) stationary objects (e.g. trees) appear to move in the opposite direction
  • wagon wheel effect:
    -> stroboscopic effect: a moving wheel appears to stand still or move in opposite direction to its true rotation
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9
Q

Ambiguous retinal images - the inverse projection problem?

A
  • A 3D object is represented on a 2D (retinal) surface
  • The same pattern of light on the retina can be caused by different objects
  • The real-world 3D object cannot be derived from the retinal image
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10
Q

The fact that we experience perceptual illusions and ambiguity tells us what?

A
  • perception is more than just sensation
  • sensory information from the retina is insufficient, perception is a matter of interpretation
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11
Q

what do top down accounts of perception say?

A

perception is an interaction between sensation and cognition

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12
Q

Richard Gregory 1970?

A
  • came up with the constructive theory of perception
  • goal = explain how we attach meaning to sensory input
  • perception = interpretation of sensation
  • basic idea:
    -> perception is indirect and a constructive process of hypothesis testing
    -> for ambiguous figures 2 equally plausible hypotheses are established
    -> as perception is based on individual factors, incorrect hypotheses can be formed, which lead to perceptual errors
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13
Q

Evaluation of the constructive theory of perception?

A

(+) Theoretical account (tries to explain how perception and object recognition work)
(+) Is able to explain perceptual failure (visual illusion) and ambiguity
(-) Cannot explain why illusions persist even when they are known
(-) Suggests that perception is not effortless (active and continuous hypothesis testing)
(-) doesn’t often match our subjective experience

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14
Q

Gestalt psychologists?

A
  • Two light flashes presented in a rapid alternating fashion create illusory movement
  • Modern version of the phi phenomenon: Apparent motion induced by sequentially presented static stimuli
  • The sensory experience (two light flashes) is not sufficient to explain the perceptual experience (illusion of movement)
  • ‘The whole is more than the sum of its parts’
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15
Q

How do we achieve the whole (the object)?

A
  • by perceptual organisation such as:
    -> grouping
    -> segmentation
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16
Q

What are Gestalt’s principles (heuristics) of perceptual organisation that lead to whole?

A
  1. proximity - elements that are close together are grouped together
  2. similarity - elements that look similar are grouped together, similarity seems to override proximity
  3. common fait - elements that appear to move together are grouped together
  4. good continuation - points that, when connected, result in straight or smoothly curving lines are seen as belonging together
  5. closure - elements that close a figure are grouped together
  6. relative size
  7. surroundedness
  8. orientation
  9. symmetry
    - elements that are relatively smaller, in a surronded area, horizontally/ vertically oriented + symmetrical are grouped together
17
Q

What is the law of Prägnanz?

A

“Of several geometrically possible organisations that one will actually occur which possesses the best, simplest, and most stable shape.”

18
Q

Evaluation of Gestalt psychology?

A

(+) Provides a set of useful perceptual heuristics (principles of how sensory input is grouped and segmented)
(-) Aims to be a theoretical account but is mainly descriptive (describes what grouping principles are, not how object perception and recognition work)