Sensory and Perceptual Process Notes
Sensory and Perceptual Process Notes
The Vestibular system responds to gravity and keeps you informed of your body’s
location in space. It provides the sense of balance, or equilibrium. Shares space in the
inner ear with the auditory system.
The ventral stream (also known as the "what pathway") travels to the temporal lobe and
is involved with object identification. The ventral stream is associated with object
recognition and form representation.
The dorsal stream is proposed to be involved in the guidance of actions and recognizing
where objects are in space.
optic disk- a hole in the retina where the optic nerve fibers exit the eye
optic chiasm – the point at which the optic nerves from the inside half of each eye cross
over and then project to the opposite half of the brain.
1. We receive this stimuli through our sense organs, the five senses
2. Sensory Receptor Cells- receive the stimuli from the environment and
through transduction transfer it to nerve impulses to be processed in the
brain.
4. Electromagnetic Radiation
| Gamma| X Ray| UV| Visible Light| Infrared| Microwaves| Radar| Radio| UHF|
Broadcasts
1. The Eye
1. Cornea- clear covering, (close eye & feel as move eye, look at a
neighbors from the side)
2. Sclera - the whites of their eyes
3. Iris - A sphincter muscle
1. Controls pupil size
2. Colored by melanin (a pigment) it is influenced by heredity and
tends to respond to emotions.
4. Pupil - the opening, not really a structure or tissue but the opening in the
Iris. You may see changes in the Iris with a beam of light that constricts
the pupil
5. Lens and Ciliary Muscle- provides focus of the image on the retina
1. The Lens changes shape to focus light, a convex bulge to focus
close
2. The Lens flattens concavely to focus on distant objects
6. Nearsighted (Myopic)- Due to shape of eyeball, it is a longer distance
between lens and retina than in a normal eye, light converges in front of
retina
7. Farsighted (Amblyopia)- Due to a shorter eyeball than normal, light
lacks space to coverage properly
8. Accommodation- process used to focus, becomes more difficult and takes
longer with age as we lose elasticity of the lens
9. Vitreous Humor- fluid in the eye, its in this that we see "floaters"- those
dots we see sometimes in our field a vision if we look at area of single
color, like perhaps a sky while resting on the grass..
10. Retina (Latin for net)- the film of the eye so to speak, where vision
begins, it contains rods and cones that respond to a small amount of
energy, the smallest cell is about 1 micron
1. Rods (125 million) & Cones (8 million)
2. Fovea- the point where there is a concentration of only cones, the
point of best vision (100,000) cones are packed into fovea)
3. Blind Spot - actually it is only the optic nerve or where the nerves
leave the retina, there are no rods or cones only the nerve cells so
there is no vision at this point in the field of vision
1. Dark adaptation- The chemicals in the rods and cones adapt or change
concentration to allow them to increase sensitivity to reduced amounts of
environmental light
1. The Cones react in about 10 minutes by increasing the amount of
Iodopsin
2. Rods take about 30 minutes to fully adjust, increasing one's low
light vision even more.
3. The effects of adaptation are because of the original decrease in
chemical storage in the cells from the bright environment we were
in before we entered a darker area, time is needed to increase the
amount of the chemical in the rods and cones, this is the process of
dark adaptation
2. Light Adaptation- Is the opposite reaction, excess amounts of the
chemical make our rods and cones oversensitive to normal levels of light
until they re-adjust, reducing concentrations to normal amounts
3. Afterimages - Those little illusions we see when we look at the
intersection of black squares. The illusions is our attempt to balance the
changes in stimulus. It is a function of constant dark or light adaptation
4. How light become "sight": Not automatic but a complex higher order process.
1. Light hits the receptor cells that are linked together with interneurons.
They also connect the bipolar neurons. The bipolar cells connect with the
axons of ganglion Cells and form the optic nerve, and through chemical
and electrical processes is carried to part of the thalamus.
1. Magnocellur Cells (M)-large, 100,000 cells or so. Code
information about motion, shadow, distance and depth. Work in
dim light.
2. Parvocellular Cells (P) - smaller, code information about color,
fine lines, texture, shape and form, work in bright light.
2. The impulse is processed further by others parts of the brain and is relayed
to the Primary Visual Area of the Occipital lobe. It is here where seeing
begins, later it is interpreted by the association areas of the brain giving us
the rich experience of vision.
3. The brain organizes these spots, lines, motions and contours into more
complex images in these association areas. One area is the Temporal
Lobe:
1. Temporal Lobe- Visual information is interpreted as recognizable
objects.
2. "Visual Agnosia" is a condition where this area is damaged and
you cannot say what you see even though you recognize what you
see.
5. Eye Movement
6. Color Vision
1. Tri-Chromatic Theory
7. Color Blindness
1. Monochromatic- no color vision at all, only have rods and lack cones for
color vision
2. Dichromatic- have deficiency in one of the cone pairs, unable to
distinguish R from G, or Y from B
8. Mechanisms of Perception