Topic 1 - Perception Flashcards
1
Q
Sensation and Perception
A
- Sensation is receiving input, perception is interpreting
- Sensation is light hitting your eye, perception is seeing the object
- All of your experience of the world, despite seeming direct, are interpretations of sensory input by the brain (“best guesses”)
2
Q
Necker Cube
A
- You perceive either a cube facing up or down, and can change your interpretation
- Actual image is ambiguous, but our brain guesses
3
Q
Dragon Illusion
A
- You perceive the dragon turning its head, even though it doesn’t move
- Your brain thinks this makes more sense than the alternative based on previous experience, so it decides that is what is happening
4
Q
Blind Spot
A
- Eyes have a blind spot where certain things will be obscured from vision
- Our brain tries to pretend the spot isn’t there by filling it in
5
Q
Saccadic Masking
A
- When your eyes move (a saccade), you temporarily don’t see
- When you move your head, things are blurry because your eyes aren’t “shut off” the same way
- Turns out there’s a significant amount of time where you aren’t actually seeing
6
Q
Cut-off Skull Error
A
- We tend not to draw the back of the head as big as it actually is
- We have learned that the face is more important, so we kind of ignore the rest
- When drawing, we are trying to give someone visual sensations even though our drawing is already based on our filtered perceptions
- Note that we do perceive the full skull, we just don’t really think about it
7
Q
Concave/Convex dots
A
- A series of gradient-shaded circles, we perceive the dots with darkness on the bottom as being convex and the dots with darkness on top as being concave
- This is because our brain is used to light shining from above, so we make an assumption based on previous experience
8
Q
Cylinder on Checkerboard
A
- Two identically shaded grey tiles appear to be different shades because one is in a shadow
- We make an involuntary assumption based on previous experience (ie. that things in shadows are artificially darker)
9
Q
Circle in Clouds
A
- Circle behind grey clouds appears to be black when on a white background and white when on a black background
- Decision is made based on environmental clue
10
Q
Artists’ Aides
A
- Use a grid to negate things like cut-off skull error
- Even practiced professionals find it difficult to overcome cognitive biases
11
Q
Dot Walker
A
- Perceive a small number of moving dots as a person walking
- Perceptive tricks can be helpful in identifying objects, it’s just a problem when it’s not really that object
- Extrapolate very small amounts of information