R E C A P / E V A L U A T E / R E T H I N K
R E C A P
What principles underlie our organization of the visual world
and allow us to make sense of our environment?
• Perception is a constructive process in which people go
beyond the stimuli that are physically present and try to
construct a meaningful interpretation. (p. 126)
• The gestalt laws of organization are used to describe the
way in which we organize bits and pieces of information
into meaningful wholes, known as gestalts, through
closure, proximity, similarity, and simplicity. (p. 126)
• In top-down processing, perception is guided by
higher-level knowledge, experience, expectations, and
motivations. In bottom-up processing, perception
consists of the progression of recognizing and processing
information from individual components of a stimuli
and moving to the perception of the whole. (p. 127)
How are we able to perceive the world in three dimensions
when our retinas are capable of sensing only two-dimensional
images?
• Depth perception is the ability to perceive distance and
view the world in three dimensions even though the
images projected on our retinas are two-dimensional.
We are able to judge depth and distance as a result of
binocular disparity and monocular cues, such as motion
parallax, the relative size of images on the retina, and
linear perspective. (p. 129)
• Perceptual constancy permits us to perceive stimuli as
unvarying in size, shape, and color despite changes in
the environment or the appearance of the objects being
perceived. (p. 130)
• Motion perception depends on cues such as the
perceived movement of an object across the retina and
information about how the head and eyes are moving.
(p. 131)
What clues do visual illusions give us about our understanding
of general perceptual mechanisms?
• Visual illusions are physical stimuli that consistently
produce errors in perception, causing judgments that do
not refl ect the physical reality of a stimulus accurately.
One of the best-known illusions is the Müller-Lyer
illusion. (p. 132)
• Visual illusions are usually the result of errors in the
brain’s interpretation of visual stimuli. Furthermore,
culture clearly affects how we perceive the world.
(p. 132)
• Subliminal perception refers to the perception of
messages about which we have no awareness. The
reality of the phenomenon, as well as of ESP, is open to
question and debate. (p. 134)
feL82795_ch04_096-137.indd Page 135 20/07/10 11:31 PM user-f463
feL82795_ch04_096-137.indd Page 135 20/07/10 11:31 PM user-f463
/Volumes/202/MH00543_r1/hin73516_disk1of1/0073373516/Access_Archive/hin73516_...
/Volumes/202/MH00543_r1/hin73516_disk1of1/0073373516/Access_Archive/hin73516_
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |