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Chapter 5: Sensation and Perception
Chapter Outline
1. Common features of sensation and perception2. The chemical senses: Smell and taste3. The tactile or cutaneous senses: Touch,
pressure, pain, vibration4. The auditory sense: Hearing5. The visual sense: Sight
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Basic Definitions
Sensation—the act of using our sensory systems to detect environmental stimuli
Perception—recognizing and identifying sensory stimulus
Raw Sensory Data Vision Light waves Hearing Sound waves Smell Airborne
chemicals Taste Food
chemicals Touch Pressure
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Common Features of Sensation and Perception
What do we need to do to the raw sensory data so that our brain can understand it?
Sensory receptor cells—specialized cells that convert a specific form of environmental stimuli into neural impulses.
Sensory transduction—the process of converting a specific form of sensory data into a neural impulse that our brain can read
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Sensory Receptor Cells
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Thresholds: Testing the Limits
Absolute threshold is the smallest amount of a stimulus that one can detect For example, what is the dimmest light you
can see?
Difference threshold (or JND)—the minimal difference needed to notice a difference between two stimuli For example, when do you perceive a
difference in change of volume in your ear?
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Sensory Adaptation
Constant stimulation decreases the number of sensory messages sent to the brain, which causes decreased sensation. Why? We can’t afford to waste attention on unchanging stimuli
Examples: A crying baby will wake us, but not a
thunderstorm that might be even louder You notice how tight your pants are when you first
put them on but over the course of the day they seem looser (you don’t register the sensation of the tightness)
You do not notice how much perfume you put on; at first it seems good but then you do not smell it so you put on more and more…
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Processing Sensory Information
Bottom-up processing—the raw sensory data is sent to the brain and your brain uses all of that data to build a perception You take 1,000s of data points of visual stimuli and put
them together to create an image of your mother
Top-down processing—you use previously learned information to help recognize and interpret the data coming into your brain You recognize some of those data points and
immediately match them to your previous knowledge about your mother’s face
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Perceptual Set
Perceptual set is the readiness to interpret a certain stimulus in a certain way
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How Do We Smell?
Chemicals, called odorants, are carried through the air and reach the 5 million receptor cells located at the top of each nasal cavityo Olfactory receptor neurons
The receptor cells turn that molecule into a neural impulse (transduction) and send that impulse to the olfactory bulb (smell centre in the brain)o Lock-and-key binding
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Human Olfactory System
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How Do We Taste?
Chemical substances in the food we eat dissolve in saliva and fall into the crevices between the bumps (papillae) of the tongue The bumps hold our taste buds Each taste bud contains 60 to 100 sensory
receptor cells for taste Taste buds are our receptor cells for taste
The taste buds translate the chemical message into a neural impulse and send that impulse to the thalamus and, eventually, the cerebral cortex
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A Taste Bud
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Five Taste Receptors
1. Sweet 2. Sour 3. Bitter 4. Salt 5. Umami—the taste of monosodium glutamate
(MSG)
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Eating Is More than Taste and Smell
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Smell and Taste Disorders
Anosmia—inability to smell Ageusia—inability to taste
Both are usually caused by head traumaOther conditions:
Reflex epilepsy—a seizure occurs only after exposure to a specific odour
Migraine headaches—specific odours can trigger migraines
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Tactile or Cutaneous Senses
The tactile or somatosensory system is a combination of skin senses: Pressure, touch, temperature, vibration,
pain The tactile senses rely on a variety of
receptors located in different parts of the skin
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Sensory Receptors in the Skin
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Different Sensory Receptors
Free nerve endings Located near the surface of the skin Function: Detect touch, pressure, or pain
Meissner’s corpuscles Located in fingertips, lips, and palms (hairless skin areas) Function: Transduce information about sensitive touch
Merkel’s discs Located near the surface of the skin Function: Transduce information about light to moderate pressure
against the skin Ruffini’s end organs
Located deep in the skin Function: Register heavy pressure and movement of the joints
Pacinian corpuscles Located deep in the skin Function: Respond to vibrations and heavy pressure.
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Steps to Perceiving Touch
1. Sensory neurons register pressure
2. Information sent to the spinal cord, then the thalamus (telephone operator)
3. Information is then sent to the somatosensory cortex that registers the sensation1. Tactile information is
processed contralaterally
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Two Pathways of Pain
Fast pathway pain (myelinated pathway)—sharp, localized pain is felt quicker because it travels along myelinated neurons to the brain
Slow burn (unmyelinated pathway)—nagging, burning pain is slower to be felt because it travels along unmyelinated pathways
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Why Do We Feel or Not Feel Pain?
Gate control theory—patterns of neural activity can actually close a “gate” that prevents messages from reaching parts of the brain where they are perceived as pain
Pain threshold
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Chronic Pain
Chronic pain is the most common abnormality associated with the somatosensory system
Endorphins and enkephalins are naturally occurring pain-killing chemicals in the brain They can be found in opiates such as morphine or
heroine They are produced naturally through intense physical
activity, sex, or intense stress (endogenous opiates) Cingulotomy—destruction of the cingulate cortex
An extreme form of neurosurgery to relieve chronic pain
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Pain Abnormalities
Familial dysautonomia—rare genetic condition associated with an inability to detect pain or temperature
Phantom limb sensations—tactile hallucinations of touch, pressure, vibration, and pain in the body part that no longer exists “Mirror box” therapy
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Properties of Sound
Sound waves—vibrations of the air in the frequency of hearing
Frequency—the number of cycles per second in a wave Determines pitch of sound Measured in units called Hertz (Hz), which
represent cycles per second
Amplitude—the magnitude (height of a wave) Determines loudness Measured in units called decibels (dB)
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How the Ear Hears
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Hearing
1. Sound waves enter the outer ear
2. Hits the eardrum (tympanic membrane) Thin membrane that
moves with sound waves
3. Passes into the middle earContains the 3 smallest
bones (or ossicles) in the human body: maleus (hammer), incus (anvil), and stapes (stirrup)
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Hearing
4. Stapes hits the oval window and creates vibrations that move fluid in the cochlea Oval window—membrane
separating the ossicles and the inner ear
5. The vibrations move the basilar membrane (in the cochlea), which is covered with sensory receptors called hair cells
6. As hair cells move, neural impulses are created and sent to the brain
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Different Theories of Hearing
Place theory Vibration of the basilar membrane (BM) at different
places results in different pitches/frequencies Near the oval window (where BM is thinner)—higher
frequencies; lower frequencies occur farther from the oval window
Frequency theory Different sound frequencies are converted into different
rates of action potentials or firing High-frequency sounds produce a more rapid firing than
do low-frequency sounds Different firing rates contribute to sound perception of
low frequency tones
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Sound Localization
General loudness—louder sounds seem closerLoudness in each ear—the ear closer to the
sound hears a louder noise than the ear farther from the sound
Timing—sound waves will reach the ear closer to the source of the sound before they reach the ear farther away
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Hearing and the Brain
Cochlea brainstem thalamus auditory cortex auditory association areas in the cortex Tonotopic map—information transmitted
from different parts of the cochlea is projected to specific parts of the auditory cortex
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Auditory Abnormalities
Deafness Can be genetic or caused by infection,
physical trauma, or exposure to toxins, including overdose of common medications such as Aspirin
Tinnitus—ringing in the ear Usually due to abnormalities in the ear One of every 200 people experiences
tinnitus
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Stimulus for Vision
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Steps Involved in Vision
1. Light waves enter the corneaCornea is protective outer
layer
2. Passes through the pupil The pupil is a small opening
in the eye
3. Passes through the lens The lens focuses the light
waves
4. Projected onto the retinaRetina contains all of the
receptor cells (rods and cones)
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Steps Involved in Vision
5. The rods and cones transduce the light waves into a neural impulse.
Rods Used for periphery and night
vision Not as acute as cones (i.e., fuzzy
vision) Many more rods than cones (over
100 million)
Cones Used for central and colour
vision Very acute (i.e., very clear)
The fovea in the centre of the eye is all cones
Not as many cones (4–5 million)
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Steps Involved in Vision
6. The neural impulses are sent to the optic nerve
• The optic nerve contains the axons of 1 million ganglion cells that extend through the wall of the retina and go to the brain.
7. The optic nerve carries messages from each eye to the visual cortex (occipital lobe)
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Why Do We See in Colour?
Trichomatic theory—There are three different sensors for colour and each type responds to a different range of wavelengths of light
We see more than three colours, which is he variety of colours arise from combining the three colours
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Opponent-Process Theory
The activation of one cone (at retinal level) inhibits another cone
This theory explains colour vision at the level of the ganglion cells Ganglion cells are arranged in opposing
cells: red-green, yellow-blue, black-white
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Afterimages
• Opponent-process theory may explain colour afterimages: continual viewing of red weakens the ability to inhibit green; remove red and you see green
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Afterimages (blank page to see effect)
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Colour Blindness
• Most people who are colour blind cannot distinguish between red and green; they would see only a random pattern of dots in this figure.
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“What” and “Where” Pathways
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“What” Pathway
Visual agnosia—damage to the “what” pathway; cannot recognize objects
Prosopagnosia—a form of visual agnosia in which people cannot recognize faces
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
“Where” Pathway
Hemi-neglect—damage to the “where” pathway; people ignore one side of their visual field Examples of effects: apply
makeup to only one side of face, shave only one side of face, eat food on only one side of plate
People with damage to the right side of their “where” pathways neglect the left side of their visual field
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Top-Down Processing
The process by which we organize small pieces of sensory experience into meaningful wholes
Gestalt principles Visual information is organized into coherent images Gestalt means whole or totality The whole is more than the sum of its parts
Proximity—stimuli near to one another tend to be grouped together
Similarity—stimuli resembling one another tend to be grouped together
Continuity—stimuli falling along the same plane tend to be grouped together
Good form—stimuli forming a shape tend to be grouped together while those that do not remain ungrouped
Closure—we tend to fill in small gaps in objects so that they are still perceived as whole objects
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Impossible Figure
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Grouping Rules
Proximity—we group nearby figures together
• Similarity—figures similar to each other are grouped together
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Closure
Closure—tendency to perceive incomplete figures as whole and complete
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Depth Perception
Binocular cues are cues from both eyes Convergence—the tendency of the eyes to move
toward each other as we focus on objects up close Binocular disparity—different images of objects
are cast on the retinas of each eye When images are very different, we perceive object is
close by When images are similar, we perceive object is
farther away
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Monocular Cues
Monocular cues are cues from one eye Interposition—when one object blocks part of another
from our view, we see the blocked object as farther away.
Elevation—we see objects that are higher in our visual plane as farther away than those that are lower.
Texture gradient—we can see more details of textured surfaces, such as the wood grain on a restaurant table, that are closer to us.
Linear perspective—parallel lines seem to converge in the distance.
Shading—we are accustomed to light, such as sunlight, coming from above us. We use differences in the shading of light from the top to the bottom of our field of view to judge size and distance of objects.
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Monocular Cues
Clarity or arial perspective—we tend to see closer objects with more clarity than objects that are further away. Realizing that this is sometimes referred to as a fog or smog effect will clarify what we mean by it.
Familiar size—once we have learned the sizes of objects, such as people or restaurant plates, we assume that they stay the same size, so objects that look smaller than usual must be farther away than usual
Relative size—when we look at two objects we know are about the same size, if one seems smaller than the other, we see it as farther away than the other.
Motion Parallax—if we look out the side window of a moving car or train, objects that are closer to us appear to move past us more quickly than do objects that are further away (and very distant objects (like mountains) sometimes do not appear to move at all).
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Monocular Cues and Illusions
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Pavement Patty
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Perceptual Constancy
Size constancy—we perceive objects as the same size regardless of the distance from which it is viewed
Shape constancy—we see an object as the same shape no matter from what angle it is viewed
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Shape and Size Constancy: The Ames Room
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Magnetic Hill, Moncton
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Visual Abnormalities
Blindness—About 278,000 people in Canada suffer from visual impairments, of which about 108,000 are legally blind
Amblyopia—a loss of visual abilities in a weaker eye Caused by abnormal development of the brain’s visual
cortex due to a failure to receive visual stimulation from both eyes by the age of six
Strabismus—lack of coordinated movement of both eyes; can lead to amblyopia; affects about 2 percent of the population
© John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
Copyright
Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. All rights reserved. Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that permitted by Access Copyright (The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency) is unlawful. Requests for further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. The purchaser may make back-up copies for his or her own use only and not for distribution or resale. The author and the publisher assume no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages caused by the use of these programs or from the use of the information contained herein.