Sensation and perception:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Belmont, Calif.
Wadsworth
1989
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Ausgabe: | 3. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverz. S. 551 - 575 |
Beschreibung: | XX, 597 S. zahlr. Ill. u. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0534096727 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804118271302041600 |
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adam_text | Titel: Sensation and perception
Autor: Goldstein, Eugen Bruce
Jahr: 1989
Preface xvii Acknowledgements xix
chapterI
Introduction to Perception l
Some Questions about Perception 1
What Are Sensations and Perceptions? 1
Why Study Perception? 2
How Can We Study Perception? 6
Steps in the Perceptual Process 6
The Psychophysical Approach 7
Perception and Physiobgy 17
Descriptions, Mechanisms, and Levels of
Explanation in Perception 20
The Role of Theories in Perception 21
chapter2
The Physiolo cal Bases ofPerce
The Nervous System 33
Sensory Receptors 33
Transmission of Signals to the Brain 34
Electrical Signals in Neurons 37
Wet Signals in the Nervous System 37
Basic Properties of Nerve Impulses 38
Jumping the Synapse: Excitation and
Inhibition 40
Neural Circuits 40
Introduction to Neural Circuits 40
Neural Processing: Introduction to Receptive
Fields 43
Detailed Contents
Structuralism 22
The Gestcdt Approach 22
The Constructive Approach 23
The Ecohffcal Approach 25
The Cognitive Approach 26
The Plan of This Book 27
Summary 29
Study Questions 30
Glossary 31
ption 33
The Sensory Code 50
The Code for Qualify across the Senses 52
The Code for Quality within a Sense 52
The Code for Subjective Magnitude 55
The Mind-Body Problem Revisited 58
Studying the Neural Code 59
Summary 59
Study Questions 60
Glossary 61
chapter3
Basic Mechanisms of Vision
The Stimuli for Vision 64
Distal Stimuli, Proximal Stimuli, and Visual
Angle 64
Geometrical Stimuli 68
Grating Stimuli and Spatial Frequency 68
Ecological Stimuli 68
Focusing Light onto the Retina 70
First Steps in the Visual Process 70
Focusing Light onto the Receptors 71
The Overall Plan of the Visual System 73
The Receptors for Vision: The Rods
and Cones 74
Structure and Distribution 74
Dark Adaptation 76
CHAPTER^
Perceiving Color 108
Perceptual Questions and Perceptual
Principles 108
What Is Color ? 109
Definitions of Color 109
Color as a Private Experience 110
How Many Colors Can We See? 111
Color and Wavelength 112
Psychophysical Research on Color Perception 117
Color Matching and the Trichromatic
Hypothesis 117
Phenomenological Observations and the
Opponent-Process Hypothesis 122
Quantitative Measurements of
Opponency 124
Physiological Research on Color Perception 126
Receptors, Pigments, and the Trichromatic
Hypothesis 126
Opponent Cells in the Retina and LGN 126
64
Spectral Sensitivity 80
Sensitivity and Neural Wiring 84
Acuity and Neural Wiring 85
The Ganglion Cells 88
The Lateral Geniculate Nucleus 90
The Visual Cortex 91
Receptive Fields of Cortical Cells 92
Cortical Cells as Feature Detectors 93
The Organization of the Visual Cortex 95
The Complexities of Perception 100
Summary 102
Study Questions 104
Glossary 105
Neural Processing and Perceptual
Experience 130
Color Coding in the Striate Cortex 131
Color Deficiency 133
Monochrormtism 134
Dichromatism 134
Physiological Mechanisms 135
Color Vision in Animals 135
Color Constancy 136
Our Perception of Color Depends on More
Than Wavelength 136
What Causes Color Constancy? 137
The Rays Are Not Coloured 139
Summary 140
Study Questions 141
Glossary 142
chapter5
Perceiving Brightness and Contra
What Is Brightness? 146
Mach Bands: How a Neural Circuit Influences
Brightness Perception at Borders 147
Lateral Inhibition 149
A Neural Circuit for Mach Bands 150
What Is Contrast? 154
The Effect of Contours on Contrast
Perception 155
Fuzzy and Sharp Contours 155
Stabilizing the Image 157
The Effect of Spatial Frequency on Contrast
Perception 160
The Grating Stimulus J60
The Contrast Sensitivity Function 161
Contrast Sensitivity and Visual Acuity 166
CHAPTERU
Perceiving Objects and Forms
What s So Hard about Perceiving Objects? 188
Perceptual Organization: The Gestalt
Approach 192
What Is Perceptual Organization? 192
The Beginnings of Gestalt Psychology 193
The Laws of Organization 196
Figure-Ground Segregation 203
What Does Gestak Psychology Tell Us? 206
Modern Extensions of Gestalt Psychology 209
What Stimulus Properties Are Responsible for
Grouping? 209
How Does Grouping Affect Our Ability to
Extract Information from a Display? 209
How Are Figure and Ground Analyzed by the
Visual System? 211
st 145
The Observer s State of Adaptation 168
From Backyard to Basement 168
Operating Curves 168
Lightness Constancy 173
Burzlaff s Lightness Constancy
Experiment 173
Lightness Constancy and Relationships 175
Lightness Constancy in Shadows 177
Lightness Constancy and Perceived
Illumination 179
Uncovering the Complexities of Perception 183
Summary 185
Study Questions 186
Glossary 187
188
The Idea of Perceptual Processing 212
Perception as Hypothesis Testing 212
Perception as a Process of Taking in
Information by Eye Movements 213
Preattentive and Focused Processing 213
Tu/o Stages of Processing 213
Determining die Primitives 214
Combining the Primitives 215
Recognition-by-Components 217
The Computational Approach 220
Parts or Wholes? 222
Summary 223
Study Questions 224
Glossary 225
CHAPTER/
Perceiving Depth and Size ill
The Cue Approach 227
Oculomotor Cues 229
Convergence and Accommodation 229
Pictorial Cues 229
Overlap 229
Size in the Field of View 230
Height in the Field of View 231
Atmospheric Perspective 232
Familiar Size 232
Linear Perspective 234
Movement-Produced Cues 236
Motion Parallax 236
Deletion and Accretion 237
Binocular Disparity 237
Two Eyes: Two Viewpoints 237
Corresponding Retinal Points 239
Disparity Information and the Brain 243
chapter8
Perceiving Movement and Events
Five Ways to Make a Spot of Light Appear to
Move 277
Real Movement 278
Factors That Influence Our Perception of Real
Movement 278
Mechanisms for the Perception of Real
Movement 279
Apparent Movement 288
Movement between Two Lights 288
Movement in Complex Displays 289
Two Systems for Apparent Movement 291
The Low-Level System: Movement Before
Form 292
The High-Level System: Form Before
Movement 293
Perceiving Size 245
Visual Angle, Retinal Size, and Distance 245
Perceiving Size as Visual Angle Changes 247
Size Constancy and Depth Perception 247
Can We Perceive an Object s Visual
Angle? 252
Illusions of Size 253
The Ames Room 253
The Moon Illusion 254
The MuUeT Lyer and Ponzo Illusions 259
The Ecological Approach 262
Basic Principles 262
The Information in the Optic Array 264
Summary 269
Study Questions 270
Glossary 271
274
Cognitive Factors and tine Two Movement
Systems 293
Summary of the Differences between Low- and
High-Level Movement Systems 293
Induced Movement 295
Autokinetic Movement 297
Aftereffects of Movement 299
The Waterfall Illusion 299
Event Perception 300
Creating Structure through Motion 301
Movement and the Perception of
Causality 306
Movement and the Perception of Motives and
Personality 307
Vision and Balance 307
Moving through the Environment 309
Movement Perception and Multiple Approaches
to Perception 312
chapter9
Perceptual Development 318
Measuring Infant Perception 319
Problems in Measuring Infant Perception 319
Looking 319
Reaching 322
Visual Scanning 322
Visual Evoked Potential 322
Color Vision 322
Seeing Details 324
Visual Acuity 324
Contrast Sensitivity 325
Accommodation 327
Depth Perception 327
Binocular Disparity 328
Pktoral Cues 332
Form Perception 333
Constancy: Invariance across
Transformations 335
Genetic Programming or Environmental
Influence? 337
CHAPTER 10
Clinical Aspects of Vision 355
What Can Go Wrong? 355
Focusing Problems 356
Myopia 356
Hyperopia 358
Astigmatism 359
Decreased Transmission of Light 360
What Is Blindness? 360
Corneol Disease and Injury 360
Clouding of the Lens (Cataract) 361
Damage to the Retina 362
Diabetic Retinopathy 362
Macidar Degeneration 364
Summary 313
Study Questions 314
Glossary 315
Cortical Cells in Newborn Cats
and Monkeys 337
The Effects of Deprivation 338
Deprivation and Acuity 338
Deprivation and Binocuknity 338
The Effects of Selective Rearing 342
The Effects of Visual Deprivation on
Humans 346
Monocular Rearing Due to Eye Patching 346
Early Strabismi^ 346
Early Astigmatism 349
Summary 350
Study Questions 352
Glossary 353
Detached Retina 365
Hereditary Retinal Degeneration 368
Optic Nerve Damage 368
Glaucoma 368
The Eye Examination 371
Who Examines Eyes? 371
What Happens During an Eye Exam? 372
Summary 378
Study Questions 379
Glossary 380
CHAPTER 11
Hearing I: Psychophysics 382
A World of Sound 382
The Stimulus for Hearing 385
Sound as Vibrations of the Air 385
Perceptual Dimensions of Hearing 389
Loudness 389
Pitch 389
Timbre 389
Consonance and Dissonance 389
Perceptual Organization 390
Localization 390
Loudness and Thresholds 390
Amplitude, Decibels, and Loudness 390
Magnitude Estimation of Loudness 391
The Auditory Response Area 391
Pitch 394
Tone Height and Tone Chroma 394
Periodicity Pitch (The Effect of the Missing
Fundamental) 395
Timbre 396
CHAPTER 12
Hearing II: Vhysiologjical Mccfiar
Structure and Functioning of the Auditory
System 418
The Outer Ear 419
The Middle Ear 420
The Inner Ear 422
Central Structures 424
Introduction to the Physiology of Pitch
Perception 425
The Place Code for Frequency 426
Hehnholtz Resonance Theory 427
Bekesy s Traveling Wave 427
Additional Evidence for Bekesy s Place
Theory 429
The Temporal Code for Frequency 433
Consonance and Dissonance 399
Combining Pure Tones 399
Combining Complex Tones 401
Perceptual Organization 403
Similarity 403
Proximity 405
Good Continuation 406
Melody Schema 406
Localization 407
Auditory Space 407
Interaural Time Difference 408
Interaural Intensity Difference 411
Sound Relations by the Pinna 412
The Psychophysical Approach to Hearing 412
Summary 413
Study Questions 414
Glossary 415
usms 418
Rutherford s Frequency Theory 434
Wever s VoUey Principle 434
Phase Locking 435
What the Place and Temporal Theories Can and
Cannot Explain 436
How Place and Timing Work Together 436
The Effect of Increasing Stimulus
Intensity 436
Periodicity Pitch 437
The Code for the Location of Sounds
in Space 438
Neurons That Respond to Binaural Cues 438
Neurons That Have Receptive Fields in
Space 438
The Role of the Auditory Cortex 441
The Perception of Pitch 441
The Perception of Location 441
The Perception of Pattern 442
Cortical Responses to Complex Stimuli 442
CHAPTER 13
Perceiving Speech 447
The Stimulus for Speech 447
The Phoneme 447
The Sound Spectrogram 448
The Information Associated with
Phonemes 449
Demonstrations of Acoustic Variability 449
Production of the Speech Stimulus 450
The Theory of Acoustic In variance 452
Categorical Perception and the Specialness of
Speech 455
Neural Mechanisms of Speech Perception 457
CHAPTER 14
The Cutaneous Senses 469
The Skin and Its Receptors 471
Receptors and Perception 471
Cutaneous Receptor Types 472
Is There a Relationship between Receptor Type
and Structure? 474
Is There a Relationship between Receptor Type
and Perception? 475
Neural Processing 477
Receptive Fields on the Skin 477
The Relation between Physiology and
Cutaneous Acuity 480
Summary 443
Study Questions 444
Glossary 445
Conversational Speech 461
Two Problems of Conversational Speech 461
Putting Breaks between Words 462
Semantics, Syntax, and Speech
Perception 464
The Phonemic Restoration Effect 465
Summary 466
Study Questions 467
Glossary 467
Central Influences on Perception 484
The Effect of Culture and Experience on Pain
Perception 486
Gate Control Theory 487
Endorphins 488
The Role of the Active Observer 489
Summary 493
Study Questions 494
Glossary 494
CHAPTER 15
The ChemicaL Senses 496
OLFACTION
Some Myths About Human Olfaction 497
Myth #1: Human Olfactory Receptors Are
Less Sensitive Than Other Animals 497
Myth #2: Our Ability to Detect Differences in
Smell Intensity Is Poor 497
Myth #3: Our Ability to Identify Odors Is
Poor 498
Myth #4: Animals Can Use Odors to
Communicate but Humans Can t 500
Odor and Animal Communication:
Pheromones 501
Structure of the Olfactory System 502
The Odor Stimulus and the Code for Quality 503
Classifying Odor Qualities 504
The Connection between Odor and Physical
Properties 506
The Neural Code for Odor Quality 507
Coding at the Level of the Receptors 507
Coding in the Olfactory Bulb and
Beyond 510
Appendix A Psychophysical Methods 527
Appendix B The Signal Detection
Procedure 535
Appendix C Signal Detection Theory 540
Appendix D Contrast Perception and Fourier
Analysis 544
Appendix E Speech Production 548
TASTE
Factors Influencing Food Intake 513
Internal State of the Organism 513
Genetics and Past Experience 513
Conditioned Taste Aversion 514
Specific Hungers 516
Structure of the Taste System 516
Taste Quality 517
The Four Basic Tastes 517
The Taste of Water 518
Physical Properties and Taste Quality 518
The Neural Code for Taste Quality 519
Specificity (Labeled Line) Coding 519
Across-Fiber Patterning 521
Summary 522
Study Questions 524
Glossary 525
References 551
Author Index 577
Subject Index 583
Illustration Credits 593
1.1 Do You See What I See? 5
1.2 The Physical and the Perceptual 14
2.1 Intracellular and Extracellular
Recording 45
2.2 Seeing without a Retina: Electrical
Stimulation of the Visual Cortex 50
3.1 Diurnal and Nocturnal Vision 86
4.1 Why Is the Sky Blue? 116
4.2 When Does Blue Plus Yellow Equal
Green? 120
4.3 What s Special about Blue? 127
5.1 The Spreading Effect 153
5.2 The Ganzfeld, or, What Happens When
You Wear Ping-Pong Balls on Your
Eyes? 159
5.3 Contrast in Photographs 171
6.1 Disorders of Object Perception 190
6.2 Two Visual Pathways: Object Vision and
Spatial Vision 192
7.1 Flatness Cues in Pictures 240
7.2 Depth in Random Dot Patterns 244
7.3 The Sun, the Moon, and the Law of
Visual Angle 249
7.4 Shape Constancy 262
8.1 A Frozen World: A Loss of Movement
Perception in a Woman with Cortical
Damage 281
Boxes
8.2 Apparent Motion: Some Interesting
Effects 290
9.1 Sensory-Motor Coordination 330
9.2 The Case of S.B.: Recovery from Lifelong
Blindness 347
10.1 Vision Problems in the U.S. 357
10.2 Art of the Eye I: Artists with Visual
Disabilities 366
10.3 Art of the Eye II: Artists with Retinitis
Pigmentosa and Retinal Detachment 370
11.1 Sonar System of the Blind 384
11.2 Infrasound Detection by the Homing
Pigeon 392
11.3 Perceiving Sound in Rooms: Reverberation
Time 408
11.4 The Precedence Effect 410
12.1 Environmental Noise and Hearing
Loss 430
13.1 Can Infants Perceive Speech? 458
14.1 Seeing with the Skin 470
14.2 Lateral Inhibition on the Skin 479
14.3 Kinesthesis 485
14.4 Reading Braille: The Limitations of Tactile
Perception 490
15.1 Odor Identification in the Blind 499
15.2 Green Mashed Potatoes? 515
xv
Modes of Color Appearance 8
Measuring the Muller-Lyer Illusion 12
Spending Time in Your Closet 14
Selective Adaptation to Colors and Tilted
Bars 16
Identifying a Stimulus 17
A Psychophysical Demonstration of
Opponency 19
Visual Angle and Size in the Field of View 67
Becoming Aware of What Is in Focus 72
Seeing the Blind Spot 76
Spending Some More Time in the Closet 82
Foveal vs. Peripheral Acuity 85
Afterimages and Simultaneous Contrast 122
Visualizing Colors 123
Adapting to Red 137
Masking the Surroundings 138
Creating Mach Bands in Shadows 148
Simultaneous Contrast 152
Making a Disc Disappear 156
The Jiggle of the Eyes 156
Selective Adaptation of Size 165
Spatial Frequencies in a Picture 167
Demonstrating Lightness Constancy to
Yourself 174
Covering the Penumbra 178
The Mach Card Demonstration 179
Lightness at a Corner 181
Finding Faces in a Landscape 201
Determinants of Figure and Ground 205
Figures That Can Be Seen in More Than One
Way 207
Demonstrations
Detecting Targets in a Display 209
Where You Look Makes a Difference 213
Pop-Out Boundaries 214
Visual Search 214
Feelings in Your Eyes 229
Looking Around Your Finger 237
Binocular Depth from a Picture, without a
Stereoscope 238
Size-Distance Scaling and Emmert s Law 250
Size-Distance Scaling in the Mirror 251
The Visual Angle of the Moon 256
Viewing a Penny at an Angle 262
Using an Afterimage to Eliminate the Sensory
Movement Signal 284
Pushing on Your Eyeball 285
A Demonstration of Apparent Movement 289
Inducing Movement in a Dot 296
Observing Autokinetic Movement 297
The Spiral Aftereffect 299
The Kinetic Depth Effect with Pipe
Cleaners 302
Perceiving Moving Dots 303
Keeping Your Balance 308
Motion Parallax and the Line of Sight 310
The Tilt Aftereffect 348
Experiencing the Precedence Effect 410
Segmentation and Meaning 462
Comparing Two-Point Thresholds 481
The Sounds of Touching 492
Naming and Odor Identification 499
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Goldstein, E. Bruce 1941- |
author_GND | (DE-588)115238255 |
author_facet | Goldstein, E. Bruce 1941- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Goldstein, E. Bruce 1941- |
author_variant | e b g eb ebg |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV004042590 |
callnumber-first | Q - Science |
callnumber-label | QP431 |
callnumber-raw | QP431 |
callnumber-search | QP431 |
callnumber-sort | QP 3431 |
callnumber-subject | QP - Physiology |
classification_rvk | CP 2000 CP 2500 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)17841206 (DE-599)BVBBV004042590 |
dewey-full | 152.1 |
dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
dewey-ones | 152 - Perception, movement, emotions & drives |
dewey-raw | 152.1 |
dewey-search | 152.1 |
dewey-sort | 3152.1 |
dewey-tens | 150 - Psychology |
discipline | Psychologie |
edition | 3. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content 2\p (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Einführung Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV004042590 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T16:07:39Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0534096727 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-002529300 |
oclc_num | 17841206 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-824 DE-29 DE-634 DE-83 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-824 DE-29 DE-634 DE-83 DE-11 |
physical | XX, 597 S. zahlr. Ill. u. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 1989 |
publishDateSearch | 1989 |
publishDateSort | 1989 |
publisher | Wadsworth |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Goldstein, E. Bruce 1941- Verfasser (DE-588)115238255 aut Sensation and perception E. Bruce Goldstein 3. ed. Belmont, Calif. Wadsworth 1989 XX, 597 S. zahlr. Ill. u. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literaturverz. S. 551 - 575 Waarneming gtt Perception Sensation Senses and sensation Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd rswk-swf Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd rswk-swf 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content 2\p (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 s DE-604 Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 s Paralle Sprachausgabe deutsch Goldstein, Bruce E. Wahrnehmungspsychologie HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=002529300&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Goldstein, E. Bruce 1941- Sensation and perception Waarneming gtt Perception Sensation Senses and sensation Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4064317-7 (DE-588)4079011-3 (DE-588)4151278-9 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Sensation and perception |
title_auth | Sensation and perception |
title_exact_search | Sensation and perception |
title_full | Sensation and perception E. Bruce Goldstein |
title_fullStr | Sensation and perception E. Bruce Goldstein |
title_full_unstemmed | Sensation and perception E. Bruce Goldstein |
title_short | Sensation and perception |
title_sort | sensation and perception |
topic | Waarneming gtt Perception Sensation Senses and sensation Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Waarneming Perception Sensation Senses and sensation Wahrnehmung Wahrnehmungspsychologie Einführung Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=002529300&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT goldsteinebruce sensationandperception |