Absolute Threshold: The Smallest Possible Amount of A Stimulus That Can Be Detected
Absolute Threshold: The Smallest Possible Amount of A Stimulus That Can Be Detected
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Basic concept
Characteristics of sensory systems
The visual system
The process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent
release).
Also known as transduction
Strongly associated with bottom processing : analysis strongly shaped by sensory
receptors
Important thresholds
How to measure sensation : present stimuli sometimes and test it on people, the first
time show it, the second time do not. You can used this on different concepts, like
WEBERS LAW
The principle that to be perceived as different two stimuli must differ by a constant
minimum (rather than a constant minimum amount). Human can usually detect 2% or
1/50 of changes.
For example before we put 100 lb it can changes to 102 by 2 (changes) per 100 (how
Sensory Adaption if the stimulus detect the constant it doesnt change. The neuron that
respond suddenly became boring and they respond less than the first time.
For example : you get into a hot tub. Its too hot, so you ask your friend to turn the water off.
5 minutes later, you are in the hot tub and didnt feel to hot eventhough the temperature is still
the same. Its because the neuron in your brain still responding but less, because it gets tired.
2. Characteristics of sensory systems
Sensory system are selectives
Human see 4, birds 3, dogs 2.
Often highly adaptive they can adjust. Example : eye vision in the theater.
3. Visual System
arms). Change Ganglion cells, travels to the bundle, and goes to the eyes.
Cones Seeing in details
Color vision
Human has 3 different kinds of cones, which are blue, green, and red.
People are color blind because of this.
Rods they response to neon, yellow, green.
Usefull when it is dim light or the lighting is poor, but they dont care much about
color.
Two theories of Color Vision
Trichromatic Theory
Blue Green, and red sensors.
Combine this three responses gets read by our brain on a particular color. Blue light
hits blue con, has a great responses, if green, kind responses it, red do not response at
all.
After image
Opponent Process Theory
Blue-yellow, red-green, and black-white sensors. Ganglia cells do this.
Optic nerve sending information to the brain
Blind spot
Synesthesia : the perceptual experience of one sense that is evoked by another sense
Sect way of perception
PERCEPTION
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Review
Important Points about Perception
Object Perception
Depth and Distance Perception
Illusions
I. Review
Sensation: The process of converting physical
stimuli into the language of the brain.
Example: converting photons of light into
nerve impulses
Perception: The process of integrating,
organizing, and interpreting sensory
information.
Example: recognizing the pattern of light that
corresponds to the face of a friend
Perception : making
sense what you send.
More mental. Like
meaning,
understanding.
Perception as Inference
The account of perception thats starting to emerge is what
we might call the brains best guess theory of perception:
perception is the brains best guess about what is happening
in the outside world. The mind integrates scattered, weak,
rudimentary signals from a variety of sensory channels,
information from past experiences, and hard-wired processes,
and produces a sensory experience full of brain-provided
color, sound, texture, and meaning. We see a friendly yellow
Labrador bounding behind a picket fence not because that is
the transmission we receive but because this is the perception
our weaver-brain assembles as its best hypothesis of what is
out there from the slivers of information we get. Perception is
inference.
-Atul Gawande in his article The Itch
Gestalt Laws of
Perceptual Grouping
We perceive as belonging together objects
that..
are close to each other (proximity).
are similar to each other (similarity).
are physically touching each other
(connectedness).
form continuous lines, curves, or patterns
(continuity/good continuation)
Depth Cues
Monocular depth cues only
require one eye
Binocular depth cues require
two eyes
Relative height In many situation the further up the image, the farther away
the stuff from you.
Relative motion if youre taking a bus, you see houses that you past move
farther away, but the buildings are as if travelling with you
Linear Perspective converge in the distance
Light and shadow colors (dan bayangan)
Binocular Depth Cues
Convergence eyes have to turn in to keep looking at things that youre
seeing.
Retinal/ Binocular Disparity same things looking different at each eyes.
How brain create a depth.
Illusions
States of Consciousness
1. Introduction
2. Circadian Rhythms rhythms that last about a day. Run long in a certain
circumstances. Zaitgebers (free running), artificial light can stretch your clock
longer. Exposure yourself to the sun light. Set your meal, like youre getting
up to get that meal. This clock run long, they hate when it got shortened like
jet lag.
What regulates this rhythms SCN (long name : Suprachiasmatic Nucleus)
(small cluster neuron inside that moves like a clock). How do we know SCN
that is important? If you put it inside the SCN it will blew up, they will wake
up and sleep, so theyll wake up and sleep all day. So if this region of brain
3. Sleep
How to measure sleep sleep deprive how quickly you fall asleep,
how tired you are. Its called MSLT. If you fall asleep 5 minutes later,
its called deep sleep. Need 10 hours sleep a day to not fall asleep in
Why do we sleep?
Protection
Restoration myths and half truth
Growth human growth happened at night
Memory Enhancement
DREAMS
Dream Theories
Freudian Dream Theory : dreams allow unconscious symbolic wish
fulfillment
some things can represent sex but its not in your dream, so your
dream is kind of protecting your mind.
This Freud theory has never been proven and lack of evidence
Activation Synthesis Theory : dreams represent the higher brains (celebral;
cortexs) attempt to interpret random signals from the lower brain.
Lower part of brain turn on and kind shower on the higher part of the
brain to make sense of it all.
Introduction
Classical Conditioning
Ivan Pavlov from Rusia
Collected dogs saliva
Dogs really want to
eat when there is food,
it also really want to
eat when they guy
who usually gave the
dogs food showed up
stimulus
and
responses.
Unconditioned
Food nausea
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Operant Conditioning
Basic Concepts
Thorndike do studies with cat. Put the cat in the box, and the cat have to get out of
the box to get some food. At first the cat didnt know whats going on. But then after
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