16
Visual Perception

Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

Visual Perception

Page 2: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

Let’s revise yayy!

StimulusCornea

Pupil

Iris

Aqueous Humour

Vitreous Humour

Ciliary Muscles Retina Sclera

Optic nerve

1. Reception

Lens

Page 3: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

2. Transduction

Electromagnetic energy (light)

Photochemical a.k.a. electrochemical energy (signal)

RodsCones

Page 4: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

3. Transmission

Photochemical a.k.a. electrochemical energy (signal)

Page 5: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

4. Organisation and Interpretation

Page 6: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

Visual perception principles

• Usually used automatically with no conscious effort,

• but sometimes used intentionally (on purpose) by artists, designers, and advertisers!

(Play video)

Page 7: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

1. Gestalt Principles

• Organise features of a visual scene by grouping them to perceive a whole, complete form in the simplest possible way.

1. Figure-ground organisation2. Closure3. Similarity4. Proximity

Page 8: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

1. Figure-ground organisation

Ground

Figure

Page 9: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

Ambiguous/Reversible figure

Page 10: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

Camoflage

Page 11: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

2. Closure

Page 12: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

3. Similarity

Page 13: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

3. Similarity

Page 14: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

4. Proximity (or nearness)

Page 15: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

4. Proximity (or nearness)

Page 16: Psychology: Visual perception 3. By Janice Fung

Let’s revise again! Gestalt Principles

• Organise features of a visual scene by grouping them to perceive a whole, complete form in the simplest possible way.

1. Figure-ground organisation2. Closure3. Similarity4. Proximity