Sensation and perception: an integrated approach
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York [u.a.]
Wiley
2000
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Ausgabe: | 5. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XV, 591 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0471249300 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | SENSATION AND
PERCEPTION
An Integrated Approach
I I Fifth Edition
Harvey Richard Schiffman
Rutgers, The State University
JOHN WILEY amp; SONS, INC
New York Chichester Brisbane Toronto Singapore
CONTENTS
I1I AN INTRODUCTION TO
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION 1
Sensation and Perception, 2
Why Study Sensation and Perception?, 3
The Historical and Scientific Roots of Sensation
and Perception, 5
Empiricism and the-Senses, 5
Sensation and Perception as Interdisciplinary
Sciences, 6
Approaches to the Study of Sensation
and Perception, 6
Structuralism, 7
Gestalt Psychology, 7
Constructivist Approach, 8
Direct Perception, 8
Computational Approach, 10
Neurophysiological Approach, 10
Cognitive Neuroscience, 10
Physiological Perspective: Neuronal
Communication, 12
The Neuron, 12
Neural Transmission, 13
Sensory-Neural Transmission and Integration, 16
Sensory Receptors, 18
Evolution, Natural Selection, and Sensory
Receptors, 19
Summary, 21
I2I PSYCHOPHYSICS 23
Detection and the Absolute Threshold, 24
Psychophysical Methods, 25
Signal Detection Theory (SDT), 27
Sensitivity Versus Response Bias, 27
Detection and Noise, 27
ROC Curves, 32
Subliminal Perception, 35
Semantic Priming, 36
The Difference Threshold, 37
Weber s Fraction, 37
Fechner s Law, 38
Stevens Power Law, 40
The Relativity of Psychophysical
Judgments, 43
Summary, 44
IaI THE VISUAL SYSTEM
The Physical Stimulus, 47
Wavelength, 48
Intensity, 49
Light Reception, 50
Anatomy of the Vertebrate Eye, 52
The Iris, Pupil, and Whytt s Reflex, 53
The Lens, 55
The Retina, 55
Variations in Eye Position: Mobility
and Placement, 61
Eye Mobility, 61
Placement of the Eyes and the Visual Field, 62
Accommodation, 62
Refractive Errors, 65
Lens Aberrations, 67
Astigmatism, 68
Pupil Mobility, 69
Pupillometry, 70
Eyeblinks, 71
/x
X D CONTENTS
Eye and Brain, 71
Visual Pathway of Eye to Brain, 71
Receptive Fields, 75
Receptive Fields for Ganglion Cells: Center-Surround
Organization, 75
Two Types of Ganglion Cells: P-Cells
and M-Cells, 77
Receptive Fields for the LGN, 77
Receptive Fields for the Visual Cortex, 79
Cortical Cells and Feature Detection, 83
Summary, 86
FUNDAMENTAL
VISUAL FUNCTIONS
AND PHENOMENA
Scotopic and Photopic Vision, 89
Dark Adaptation, 90
Measuring Dark Adaptation, 90
The Photochemical Basis of Dark Adaptation, 92
Spectral Sensitivity and the Purkinje Shift, 93
Limits of Basic Visual Function, 95
Absolute Threshold, 95
Factors Affecting the Absolute Threshold, 95
Perceiving Continuity from Intermittent Light:
The CFF, 96
Acuity, 97
Visual Angle, 99
Recognition Acuity and the Eye Chart, 100
Acuity and Retinal Location, 100
Superior Acuity of Birds, 101
Eye Movements, 103
Saccades, 103
Pursuit Movements, 106
Vestibulo-Ocular Eye Movements, 106
Vergence Movements, 107
Miniature Eye Movements, 107
Mixed-Mode Eye Movements, 107
Development of Efficient Eye Movements, 108
Temporal Factors in Perception, 109
Masking, 109
Aftereffects, 110
Object Identification and Localization: Focal
and Ambient Systems, 112
Blindsight, 113
Summary, 114
COLOR VISION
The Function of Color Vision, 116
Color Vision in Animals, 117
The Nature of Color, 117
The Dimensions of Color, 118
Color Mixture, 120
Additive Color Mixture, 120
Subtractive Color Mixture, 124
Afterimages, 125
Color Adaptation: Color Contrast Phenomena and
Complementary Afterimages, 126
Memory Color, 127
Color Constancy, 128
Factor Influencing Color Constancy, 128
Function of Color Constancy, 128
Theories of Color Perception, 129
Trichromatic Receptor Theory CYoung—Helmholtz
Theory), 129
Opponent-Process Theory, 131
Defective Color Vision, 135
Anomalous Trichromatiism, 135
Dichromatism, 136
Monochromatism, 137
The Structural Basis of Defective Color Vision, 137
Conical Color Blindness, 138
Subjective Colors, 138
Summary, 139
VISUAL PATTERN AND
FORM PERCEPTION: BASIC
PROCESSES OF PERCEPTUAL
ORGANIZATION 142
Contour and Contrast Perception, 142
Lateral Inhibition, 143
Hermann Grid, 145
Lightness Contrast, 146
Stimulus Change, 149
The Ganzfeld: Perception in a Homogeneous
Field, 149
Stabilized Image, 149
Spatial Frequency Analysis, 151
Spatial Frequencies, 151
Contrast Sensitivity Function, 153
Selective Adaptation, 155
Image-Processing: Block Portraits, 156
CONTENTS • XI
Spatial Frequency and Acuity, 157
The Role of Spatial Frequency Analysis in
Vision, 158
Perceptual Processing, 158
Bottom-Up and Top-Down Processes, 158
Attention, 159
Feature Integration Theory: Preattentive and Focused
Attention Stages, 160
Object Identification: Recognition by
Components, 161
The Computational Approach, 163
The Connectionist Model, 165
Summary, 166
HIGHER PROCESSES
OF PERCEPTUAL
ORGANIZATION 168
Figure-Ground Perception, 168
Ambiguous Figure-Ground Relationships, 170
Perceptual Differences Between Figure
and Ground, 170
Figure-Ground and Perceptual Organization, 170
Tactual Figure-Ground Perception, 172
The Gestalt Approach, 173
Gestalt Psychology Versus Structuralism, 173
Gestalt Grouping Principles, 174
Measures of Grouping Effects, 178
Law of Pra gnanz, 178
Subjective Contours, 180
Apparent Overlap, 181
Neural Basis of Perceptual Organization, 185
Visual Agnosia, 185
Figural Orientation and Form Perception, 186
Perceptual Set, 187
Perceptual Set, Reading, and the Stroop Effect, 190
Bottom-up or Top-Down Processing?, 191
Summary, 192
I8I THE PERCEPTION
OF MOVEMENT
Motion Detectors, 195
Movement Systems of the Eye, 195
Image-Retina Movement System, 196
Eye-Head Movement System, 196
Optical Stimulation for Movement Perception, 200
Optic Flow Patterns, 200
Retinal Expansion and Rate of Movement, 201
Thresholds for Movement, 202
Biological Motion, 202
Biological Motion Extracted from Point-Light
Displays, 203
Distortions in the Perception of Movement, 204
Motion-Produced Depth: Kinetic Depth Effect, 204
Anorthoscopic Perception, 206
Induced Movement, 206
Pulfrich Pendulum Effect, 208
Apparent Movement, 209
Stroboscopic Movement, 209
Motion Pictures, 210
Autokinetic Movement, 212
Motion Aftereffects, 213
The Prediction of Motion Paths, 214
Summary, 216
I ft I THE PERCEPTION OF
SPACE: MONOCULAR AND
BINOCULAR VISION 218
Monocular Cues for Spatial Perception, 218
Interposition, 219
Aerial Perspective or Clearness, 219
Shading and Lighting, 219
Elevation, 221
Linear Perspective, 221
Texture Gradients, 224
Relative Size, 225
Pictorial Perception, 225 ^
Motion Parallax, 228
Motion Perspective, 231
Accommodation, 231
Familiar Size, 231
Binocular Cues, 232
Convergence, 232
Binocular Disparity, 233
Corresponding Retinal Points and the
Horopter, 234
Binocular Disparity and Stereopsis, 237
Binocular Rivalry, 239
Cyclopean Perception, 240
Physiological Basis of Binocular Disparity, 244
Xii a CONTENTS
The Interaction of Cues to Space, 245
Constructivist Approach to Spatial Cues, 245
Gibson s Direct Approach, 246
The Visual Cliff, 246
Summary, 248
I1Ql CONSTANCY AND
ILLUSIONS 250
Perceptual Constancy, 250
Lightness Constancy, 251
Size Constancy, 253
Shape Constancy, 258
Visual Illusions, 261
Transactionalism and the Ames Illusions, 26l
The Ames Illusions, 262
Illusions of Depth, Distance, and Constancy, 264
The Moon Illusion, 265
Angle-of-Regard Hypothesis, 266
Apparent Distance Hypothesis, 266
Alternative Explanations of the Moon Illusion, 268
The Muller-Lyer Illusion, 268
The Muller-Lyer Illusion and Perspective-Constancy
Theory, 268
The Ponzo Illusion, 270
The Ponzo Illusion and Perspective, 271
The Ponzo Illusion and Framing Effects, 272
The Poggendorff Illusion, 273
The Poggendorff Illusion and Perspective, 273
The Horizontal-Vertical Illusion, 275
Contrast Illusions, 275
Ambiguous, Reversible, and Multistable
Figures, 277
Multistable Figures and Adaptation, 278
Multiple Determinants of Illusions, 279
Optical-Retinal Components, 279
Cognitive Components, 280
Multiple-Illusion Figures, 281
Impossible Figures, 282
Summary, 285
PERCEPTUAL
DEVELOPMENT 287
Development of the Sensory System, 288
Cortical Effects of Visual Deprivation, 288
Effects of Rearing with Selective Visual Stimulation in
Animals, 289
Effects of Selective Stimulation for the Human, 290
Restored Sight with Humans, 292
Perception of the Newborn Human, 293
Eye Fixations and Scanning, 293
Form and Pattern Perception, 295
Color Perception, 298
Visual Acuity, 298
Space Perception, 300
Development of Perceptual-Motor
Coordination, 303
Perceptual-Motor Coordination, 303
Perceptual Adaptation to Distorted Visual
Stimulation, 305
Adaptation to Prism-Induced Distortion, 305
Adaptation to Optical Inversion and Reversal, 306
Active Movement and Adaptation, 307
Comparative Studies of Adaptation, 309
Vision and Aging, 310
The Eye and Aging, 310
The Retina and Aging, 310
Visual Acuity and Aging, 311
Summary, 312
THE AUDITORY
SYSTEM
The Physical Stimulus, 315
Frequency, 317
Amplitude, 318
Complexity, 321
Phase, 323
Resonance, 324
Anatomy and Mechanisms of the Ear, 325
The Outer Ear, 325
The Middle Ear, 327
The Inner Ear, 329
The Auditory Nerve, 331
Functioning of the Inner Ear, 332
The Place Theory, 333
The Frequency-Matching Theory, 336
Cooperation of Place and Frequency-Matching
Mechanisms, 337
Auditory Pathology, 338
Tinnitus, 338
Hearing Loss, 338
Causes of Hearing Loss and Deafness, 341
Comparative Auditory Structures, 342
Summary, 344
CONTENTS a xffi
I13I FUNDAMENTAL
AUDITORY FUNCTIONS
AND PHENOMENA 347
Intensity, 347
Intensity Discrimination, 348
Loudness, 348
Loudness and Frequency, 349
Frequency, 351
Frequency Discrimination, 351
Pitch, 351
Pitch and Intensity, 352
Hearing and Sound Duration, 353
Effects of Multiple Tonal Stimulation, 353
Beats, 353
Masking, 353
Auditory Fatigue and Auditory Adaptation, 356
Subjective Tonal Attributes, 357
Volume and Density, 357
Consonance and Dissonance, 358
Laboratory versus Natural Sounds, 358
Summary, 358
Animal Communication, 393
Dog Sounds, 393
Primate Sounds, 393
Summary, 394
AUDITORY PATTERN
PERCEPTION: SOUND AS
INFORMATION 361
The Auditory Pathway and Central Structures, 361
Cerebral Dominance and Hearing, 363
Auditory Space Perception, 365
Monaural Cues, 365
Binaural Cues, 366
The Pinna and Localization, 371
Echolocation, 372
Obstacle Perception by the Blind, 374
Perception of Music, 376
Dimensions of Music, 376
Absolute or Perfect Pitch and Tone Deafness, 377
Perception of Pitch Sequences: Melodies, 378
Chromesthesia and Music, 380
Function of Music Perception, 380
Perception of Speech, 381
Range of Speech Sounds, 381
Speech Perception with Sound Distortion, 383
General Issues in Speech Perception, 386
Perception of Words, 386
Uniqueness of Speech, 386
Auditory Scene Analysis, 391
Auditory Streams, 392
THE ORIENTING
SENSE 398
Receptors for Orientation, 398
Mammalian Orienting System, 399
Saccule and Utricle, 401
Semicircular Canals, 403
Vestibular Stimulation, 403
Vestibular Nystagmus and Vestibulo-Ocular Eye
Movements, 403
Visually Induced Illusions of Movement, 404
Vestibular Habituation, 405
Deficiencies of the Vestibular Mechanism, 406
Motion Sickness, 407
Active versus Passive Movement, 408
Cause of Motion Sickness: Sensory Conflict
Theory, 408
Reducing Motion Sickness, 408
Other Mechanisms for Orientation, 409
Magnetic Sense, 409
Summary, 410
I16l THE SKIN SENSES 412
Functions of the Skin: Protection and Sensation, 413
Cutaneous Sensitivity, 414
The Skin and The Brain, 415
Cutaneous Representation in the Brain:
The Homunculus, 415
Lemniscal and Spinothalamic Pathways, 416
Receptive Fields, 418
Slowly and Rapidly Adapting Fibers, 419
Touch and Pressure, 419
Touch Stimulation and Reception, 419
Thresholds for Touch, 420
Aristotle s Illusion, 423
Adaptation to Touch, 424
Complex Touch, 424
Braille System, 424
Tadoma Method, 425
Seeing with the Skin: Tactual-Visual Substitution
System, 426
Kinesthesis, 428
Tickling and Self-Produced Stimulation, 429
XlV n CONTENTS
Haptic System, 430
Tactual Stereognosis, 431
Roughness Enhancement, 432
Temperature, 432
Temperature Receptors and Thermal Spots, 433
Thermal Conductivity, 433
Thermal Adaptation, 434
Paradoxical and Synthetic Thermal Sensations, 436
Pain, 437
Function of Pain Perception, 437
Qualities of Pain, 438
Pain Stimulus and Pain Thresholds, 438
Subjective Factors in Pain Experience, 439
Pain Adaptation, 440
The Nociceptor, 441
Spinal Gate Control Theory, 441
Acupuncture, 443
Endorphins and Enkephalins, 444
Summary, 445
I17I THE CHEMICAL SENSE
OF TASTE 449
The Diversity and Origins of Chemoreception, 450
The Functions of Chemoreception, 450
Taste Primaries and the Chemical Stimulus, 450
Taste Primaries, 450
Origins of Primary Tastes, 451
Chemical Stimulus for Taste, 451
Anatomy and Physiology of Taste, 452
Taste Receptors, 452
Taste Pathways to the Brain, 453
Neural Recording of Taste Receptors, 453
Cross-Fiber Patterning, 453
The Best Stimulus and Labeled Lines, 455
Taste Thresholds, 456
Taste Thresholds and Temperature, 457
Taste Thresholds and Tongue Regions, 457
Taste Thresholds and Genetics, 457
Taste Thresholds and Age, 459
Taste Abnormalities and Disease, 459
Adaptation, 460
Adaptation-Produced Potentiation, 460
Cross-Adaptation, 461
Taste Interactions, 461
Taste Modifiers, 461
Sugar Substitutes, 462
Taste Preferences and Taste Worlds, 463
Taste Preferences and Selective Deprivation, 463
Origins of Taste Preferences, 464
Conditioned Taste Aversion, 464
Taste Preferences and Flavor, 465
Summary, 465
I18l THE CHEMICAL SENSE
OF SMELL 468
Function of the Sense of Smell, 468
Odor Quality, 469
The Chemical Stimulus for Smell, 469
Classification of Odor Quality, 470
Anatomy and Physiology of the Olfactory
System, 471
Olfactory Receptors, 471
Olfactory Pathways to the Brain, 473
Active Sniffing and Odor Sensitivity, 473
Plasticity of Olfactory Receptor Cells, 474
Olfactory Coding, 474
Odor Intensity, 474
Odor Quality, 474
Olfactory Disorders, 475
The Odor of Disease, 476
Odor Thresholds, 476
Odor Thresholds and Gender, 477
Odor Thresholds and Age, 478
Adaptation, 478
Self-Adaptation and Cross-Adaptation, 479
Odor Mixtures, 479
Odor Preferences, 479
Own-Odor Preference, 479
Identification and Memory of Odors, 480
Odor Memories versus Visual Memories, 480
Odors and Memory Cues, 481
Odors and Emotions, 482
Psychobiological Functions of Olfaction:
Pheromones, 483
Releaser and Primer Pheromones, 483
The Vomeronasal System, 484
Human Pheromones, 485
The Common Chemical Sense, 486
Stimuli for the Common Chemical Sense, 487
The Appeal of Irritating Chemical Stimuli, 488
Summary, 488
CONTENTS O X V
THE PERCEPTION
OF TIME 491
The Biological Basis of Time Perception, 492
Hoagland s Hypothesis: The Biological Clock, 493
Drugs and Time Perception, 494
Cognitive Theories of Time Perception, 494
Ornstein s Theory: Information-Storage Size, 494
Cognitive-Attentional Theory, 496
Biological versus Cognitive Basis of Time
Perception, 497
Age and the Passage of Time, 498
Time Perception and the Size of the Spatial
Environment, 499
Time and Distance: The Tau and Kappa
Effects, 500
Tau Effect, 500
Kappa Effect, 500
Summary, 500
GLOSSARY
REFERENCES
INDEX
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Schiffman, Harvey Richard 1934- |
author_facet | Schiffman, Harvey Richard 1934- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Schiffman, Harvey Richard 1934- |
author_variant | h r s hr hrs |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV013492218 |
callnumber-first | B - Philosophy, Psychology, Religion |
callnumber-label | BF233 |
callnumber-raw | BF233 |
callnumber-search | BF233 |
callnumber-sort | BF 3233 |
callnumber-subject | BF - Psychology |
classification_rvk | CP 2000 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)45463459 (DE-599)BVBBV013492218 |
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 | 5. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre_facet | Einführung |
id | DE-604.BV013492218 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T18:46:46Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0471249300 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-009208648 |
oclc_num | 45463459 |
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owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | XV, 591 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2000 |
publishDateSearch | 2000 |
publishDateSort | 2000 |
publisher | Wiley |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Schiffman, Harvey Richard 1934- Verfasser aut Sensation and perception an integrated approach Harvey Richard Schiffman 5. ed. New York [u.a.] Wiley 2000 XV, 591 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Empfindung swd Waarneming gtt Wahrnehmung swd Wahrnehmungspsychologie swd Perception Senses and sensation Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd rswk-swf Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 s DE-604 Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 s HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009208648&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Schiffman, Harvey Richard 1934- Sensation and perception an integrated approach Empfindung swd Waarneming gtt Wahrnehmung swd Wahrnehmungspsychologie swd Perception 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 |
title | Sensation and perception an integrated approach |
title_auth | Sensation and perception an integrated approach |
title_exact_search | Sensation and perception an integrated approach |
title_full | Sensation and perception an integrated approach Harvey Richard Schiffman |
title_fullStr | Sensation and perception an integrated approach Harvey Richard Schiffman |
title_full_unstemmed | Sensation and perception an integrated approach Harvey Richard Schiffman |
title_short | Sensation and perception |
title_sort | sensation and perception an integrated approach |
title_sub | an integrated approach |
topic | Empfindung swd Waarneming gtt Wahrnehmung swd Wahrnehmungspsychologie swd Perception Senses and sensation Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Empfindung Waarneming Wahrnehmung Wahrnehmungspsychologie Perception Senses and sensation Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009208648&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT schiffmanharveyrichard sensationandperceptionanintegratedapproach |