Chapter 4.1: Sensation and perception Flashcards
Sensation
stimulation of a sense organ(touch)
Perception
Organization, identification and interpretation of a sensation order to form a mental representation
Transduction
Sense receptors convert physical signals from the environment into neural signals that are sent to the CNS:
- Each sensory receptor is sensitive to a particular type of energy(eye = light, skin = mechanical)
- Is our perception an illusion.
Psychophysics
Methods that systematically relayed the physical characteristics of a stimulus to an observer’s perceptions
Measuring thresholds
Determining how much physical energy is required to become aware of a sensation
Absolute threshold
The minimal intensity needed to just barely detect a stimulus in 50% if the trials; useful for assessing sensitivity
Just noticeable difference
Minimal change in a stimulus that can just barely be detected - not a fixed quantity; useful for assessing acuity(distinguish between two very similar stimuli)
Weber’s law
For every sense domain, the change in a stimulus that is just noticeable is a constant ratio of the standard stimulus over a range if standard intensities(30 vs 60 lbs = noticeable 20 vs 20.1 lbs = undetectable)
Sensory adaptation
Sensitivity to prolonged stimulation tends to decline over time as organism adapts to the current (unchanging) conditions
Single detection theory
Measures in individuals perceptual sensitivity while taking noise, expectations, motivations, and goals into account