Sensation and perception:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Belmont, Calif.
Thomson Wadsworth
2007
|
Ausgabe: | 7. ed., internat. student ed., [Nachdr.] |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXIX, 438 S. Ill., graf. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780495187783 049518778X |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Sensation and perception |c E. Bruce Goldstein |
250 | |a 7. ed., internat. student ed., [Nachdr.] | ||
264 | 1 | |a Belmont, Calif. |b Thomson Wadsworth |c 2007 | |
300 | |a XXIX, 438 S. |b Ill., graf. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
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650 | 7 | |a Sens et sensations |2 ram | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137236933902336 |
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adam_text | BRIEF
CONTENTS
1
INTRODUCTION TO PERCEPTION
3 1 0
PERCEPTION AND ACTION
215
2
INTRODUCTION TO THE
PHYSIOLOGY OF PERCEPTION
21
3
NEURONS AND PERCEPTION
45
4
THE ORGANIZED BRAIN
71
5
PERCEIVING OBJECTS
93
6
VISUAL ATTENTION
121
7
PERCEIVING COLOR
141
8
PERCEIVING DEPTH AND SIZE
167
9
PERCEIVING MOVEMENT
195
1 1
SOUND, THE AUDITORY SYSTEM,
AND PITCH PERCEPTION
233
1 2
SOUND LOCALIZATION AND
THE AUDITORY SCENE
265
1 3
SPEECH PERCEPTION
285
1 4
THE CUTANEOUS SENSES
303
1 5
THE CHEMICAL SENSES
327
1
Ó
PERCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT
351
Appendix
SIGNAL DETECTION:
PROCEDURE AND THEORY
373
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION TO PERCEPTION
3
WHY READ THIS BOOK?
4
THE PERCEPTUAL PROCESS
5
Environmental Stimuli and Attended Stimuli
6
The Stimulus on the Receptors
6
Transduction
6
Neural Processing
7
Perception
7
Recognition
7
Action
8
Knowledge
8
Demonstration: Perceiving a Picture
8
HOW TO APPROACH THE STUDY OF PERCEPTION
9
Levels of Analysis
10
Communication Between the Levels of Analysis
11
MEASURING PERCEPTION
12
Description
12
Recognition
12
Method: Recognition
12
Detection
12
Method: Determining the Absolute Threshold
13
Method: Determining the Difference Threshold
14
Demonstration: Measuring the Difference Threshold
14
Magnitude Estimation
15
Method: Magnitude Estimation
15
Search
16
Other Methods of Measurement
16
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
HOW TO GET THE MOST OUT OF THIS BOOK
16
TEST YOURSELF
1.1 17
THINK ABOUT IT
17
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
1 8
KEY TERMS
18
VIRTUAL LAB
18
INTRODUCTION TO THE
PHYSIOLOGY OF PERCEPTION
21
THE BRAIN: THE MIND S COMPUTER
22
Early History of the Physiological Approach
22
Basic Structure of the Brain
24
NEURONS: COMMUNICATION AND PROCESSING
24
Recording Electrical Signals in Neurons
25
Method: Recording From a Neuron
25
Basic Properties of Action Potentials
27
Events at the Synapse
27
VISION BEGINS IN THE EYE
28
Light Is the Stimulus for Vision
29
Images Are Focused on the Retina
30
Demonstration: Becoming Aware of What Is in Focus
3 1
ix
TRANSFORMING LIGHT INTO ELECTRICITY
32
The Rod and Cone Receptors
32
Demonstration: Seeing the Blind Spot
32
Transduction of Light Into Electricity
33
TEST YOURSELF
2.1 36
PIGMENTS AND PERCEPTION
36
Dark Adaptation of the Rods and Cones
36
Method: Measuring Dark Adaptation
37
Spectral Sensitivity of the Rods and Cones
39
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
TRANSFORMATIONS AND RECEPTORS
41
TEST YOURSELF
2.2 41
THINK ABOUT IT
4 1
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
42
KEY TERMS
42
VIRTUAL LAB
43
NEURONS AND PERCEPTION
45
CONVERGENCE: MANY NEURONS
SENDING SIGNALS TO ONE NEURON
46
Convergence in the Retina
46
Why Rods Result in Greater Sensitivity Than Cones
46
Why We Use Our Cones to See Details
48
Demonstration: Foveal Versus Peripheral Acuity
48
INHIBITION: HOW ACTIVITY IN ONE NEURON CAN
DECREASE ACTIVITY IN ANOTHER ONE
49
What the Horseshoe Crab Teaches Us About Inhibition
49
Lateral Inhibition and Lightness Perception
50
Demonstration: Creating
Mach
Bands in Shadows
52
Demonstration: Simultaneous Contrast
53
Displays That Can t Be Explained by Lateral Inhibition
54
TEST YOURSELF
3. 1 55
NEURAL PROCESSING:
INTERACTIONS BETWEEN NEURONS
55
Excitation, Inhibition, and Neural Responding
56
Introduction to Receptive Fields
57
Method: Determining a Neuron s Receptive Field
57
Processing Past the Retina
58
DO FEATURE DETECTORS PLAY A ROLE
IN PERCEPTION?
62
Selective Adaptation and Feature Detectors
62
Method: Selective Adaptation
62
Method: Determining Contrast Sensitivity
63
Demonstration: Adaptation to Size
64
Selective Rearing and Feature Detectors
65
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
PERCEPTION AS INDIRECT
66
TEST YOURSELF
3.2 67
THINK ABOUT IT
67
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
67
KEY TERMS
68
VIRTUAL LAB
68
THE ORGANIZED BRAIN
71
MAPS: REPRESENTING SPATIAL LAYOUT
72
Method: Determining Retinotopic Map by
Recording From Neurons
72
The Map on the Cortex
73
Method: Brain Imaging
73
COLUMNS: ORGANIZING FOR LOCATION,
ORIENTATION, AND OCULAR DOMINANCE
75
The LGN Club Sandwich
75
Location Columns in the Cortex
75
Orientation Columns in the Cortex
75
Ocular Dominance Columns in the Cortex
76
How Is an Object Represented in the
Striate
Cortex?
76
Contents
STREAMS: PATHWAYS FOR WHAT, WHERE, AND HOW
Streams for Information About What and Where
77
Method: Ablation
78
Streams for Information About What and How
80
Method: Dissociations in Neuropsychology
80
TEST YOURSELF
4. 1 82
MODULARITY: STRUCTURES FOR
FACES, PLACES, AND BODIES
82
There Are Face Neurons in the Monkey s IT Cortex
82
Damage to the Temporal Lobe Affects a Person s Ability
to Recognize Faces
83
There Are Areas for Faces, Places, and Bodies
83
EVOLUTION AND PLASTICITY:
HOW DO NEURONS BECOME SPECIALIZED?
84
Is Neural Selectivity Shaped by Evolution?
84
How Neurons Can Be Shaped by Experience
85
THE SENSORY CODE: HOW THE ENVIRONMENT IS
REPRESENTED IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
86
Coding by Neurons and Groups of Neurons
86
Coding by Distributed Activity in the Brain
88
77
Objects Look Different From Different Viewpoints
96
The Reasons for Changes in Lightness and Darkness
Can Be Unclear
97
THE
GESTALT
APPROACH TO OBJECT PERCEPTION
97
Demonstration: Making Illusory Contours Vanish
98
The
Gestalt
Laws of Perceptual Organization
99
Demonstration: Finding Faces in a Landscape
101
Neurons That Respond to Grouping
102
The
Gestalt
Laws Are More Accurately Described
as Heuristics
102
PERCEPTUAL SEGREGATION:
HOW OBJECTS ARE SEPARATED
103
What Are the Properties of Figure and Ground?
103
Demonstration: Judging Similarity
104
What Factors Determine Which Area Is Figure?
104
How Do Neurons Respond to Figure and Ground?
105
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
ARE THERE GANDMOTHER CELLS AFTER ALL?
TEST YOURSELF
4.2 90
THINK ABOUT IT
90
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
90
KEY TERMS
91
VIRTUAL LAB
91
89
TEST YOURSELF
5.1 106
106
PERCEIVING OBJECTS
93
MODERN RESEARCH ON OBJECT PERCEPTION
Why Does the Visual System Respond Best to
Specific Types of Stimuli?
106
Must a Figure Be Separated From Ground Before
We Can Recognize Objects?
107
How Do We Recognize Objects From Different
Viewpoints?
108
How Does the Brain Process Information About Objects?
1 1 1
Method: Region-of-lnterest Approach I
12
Method: How to Present a Stimulus Briefly
1 12
Method: Preparing Stimuli by Morphing
1 13
Method: Delayed-Matching-to-Sample
1 13
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: THE INTELLIGENCE
OF HUMAN OBJECT PERCEPTION
1 14
Early Ideas About Perceptual Intelligence
1 15
Modern Ideas About Perceptual Intelligence
1 15
Demonstration: Shape From Shading
1 16
TEST YOURSELF
5.2 117
THINK ABOUT IT
117
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
1 18
KEY TERMS
1 1 8
VIRTUAL LAB
118
THE CHALLENGE OF OBJECT PERCEPTION
94
The Stimulus on the Receptors Is Ambiguous
95
Objects Can Be Hidden or Blurred
95
Contents
VISUAL
ATTENTION
121
PERCEIVING COLOR
141
ATTENTION AND PERCEIVING THE ENVIRONMENT
Why Is Selective Attention Necessary?
122
How Is Selective Attention Achieved?
123
Scanning a Scene
123
IS ATTENTION NECESSARY FOR PERCEPTION?
125
When Can Perception Occur Without Attention?
125
When Is Attention Necessary for Perception?
126
Demonstration: Change Detection
127
TEST YOURSELF
6.1 129
DOES ATTENTION ENHANCE PERCEPTION?
129
Effects of Attention on Information Processing
129
Effects of Attention on Perception
131
ATTENTION AND EXPERIENCING A
COHERENT WORLD
131
Why Is Binding Necessary?
131
Feature Integration Theory
132
Method: Searching for Conjunctions
134
The Physiological Approach to Binding
134
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF ATTENTION
135
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
DO NEURONS NOTICE STIMULI?
1 36
TEST YOURSELF
6.2 137
THINK ABOUT IT
137
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
138
KEY TERMS
139
У
L
VIRTUAL
LAB 139
122
INTRODUCTION TO COLOR
142
What Are Some Functions of Color Vision?
142
How Can We Describe Color Experience?
143
What Is the Relationship Between Wavelength and
Color Perception?
144
TRICHROMATIC THEORY OF COLOR VISION
146
Behavioral Evidence for the Theory
146
The Theory: Vision Is Trichromatic
146
Physiology of Trichromatic Theory
147
TEST YOURSELF
7.1 151
COLOR DEFICIENCY
151
Monochromatism
152
Dichromatism
152
Physiological Mechanisms of Receptor-Based
Color Deficiency
152
OPPONENT-PROCESS THEORY OF COLOR VISION
153
Behavioral Evidence for the Theory
153
Demonstration: Opposing Afterimages
153
Demonstration: Afterimages and Simultaneous
Contrast
153
Demonstration: Visualization and Color Scaling
154
The Theory: Vision Is an Opponent Process
154
The Physiology of Opponent-Process Vision
154
COLOR IN THE CORTEX
155
TEST YOURSELF
7.2 156
PERCEIVING COLORS UNDER CHANGING
ILLUMINATION
156
Demonstration: Color Perception Under Changing
Illumination
157
Chromatic Adaptation
157
Demonstration: Adapting to Red
157
The Effect of the Surroundings
158
Demonstration: Color and the Surroundings
158
Memory and Color
158
Contents
LIGHTNESS CONSTANCY
159
Intensity Relationships: The Ratio Principle
160
Lightness Perception Under Uneven Illumination
160
Demonstration: The Penumbra and Lightness
Perception
16 1
Demonstration: Perceiving Lightness at a Corner
161
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
CREATING COLOR EXPERIENCE
162
TEST YOURSELF
7.3 163
THINK ABOUT IT
163
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
164
KEY TERMS
165
VIRTUAL LAB
165
PERCEIVING DEPTH AND SIZE
167
OCULOMOTOR CUES
169
Demonstration: Feelings in Your Eyes
169
MONOCULAR CUES
169
Pictorial Cues
169
Movement-Produced Cues
171
BINOCULAR DEPTH INFORMATION
173
Binocular Disparity
173
Demonstration: Two Eyes: Two Viewpoints
173
Demonstration: Binocular Depth From a Picture,
Without a Stereoscope
176
The Correspondence Problem
177
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF DEPTH PERCEPTION
178
Neurons That Respond to Pictorial Depth
178
Neurons That Respond to Binocular Disparity
178
Connecting Binocular Disparity and Depth Perception
179
TEST YOURSELF
8.1 179
PERCEIVING SIZE
179
The Holway and Boring Experiment
1 80
Size Constancy
182
Demonstration: Perceiving Size at a Distance
Demonstration: Size-Distance Scaling and
Emmert s Law
183
183
VISUAL ILLUSIONS
185
The
Müller-Lyer
Illusion
185
Demonstration: Measuring the
Müller-Lyer
Illusion
185
Demonstration: The
Müller-Lyer
Illusion With Books
186
The
Ponzo
Illusion
1 87
The Ames Room
1 87
The Moon Illusion
188
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
DISTANCE PERCEPTION DEPENDS
ON THE ENVIRONMENT AND ON THE SELF!
1 89
TEST YOURSELF
8.2 190
THINK ABOUT IT
190
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
191
KEY TERMS
192
VIRTUAL LAB
192
PERCEIVING MOVEMENT
195
STUDYING MOVEMENT PERCEPTION
196
197
THE FUNCTIONS OF MOTION PERCEPTION
Surviving to Perceive Another Day
197
Perceiving Objects
197
Demonstration: Perceiving a Camouflaged Bird
197
Demonstration: The Kinetic Depth Effect With a
Paper Clip
199
THE MOVING OBSERVER
199
The Behavioral Approach: Taking Environmental Information
Into Account
200
Contents
The Physiological Approach: The Corollary Discharge
201
Demonstration: Eliminating the Image Movement Signal
With an Afterimage
202
Demonstration: Seeing Movement by Pushing on
Your Eyeball
203
TEST YOURSELF
9.1 204
HOW NEURONS SIGNAL THE DIRECTION
OF MOVEMENT
204
Determining the Direction in Which Oriented Bars
Are Moving
204
Demonstration: Movement of a Bar Across
an Aperture
205
Determining the Direction in Which Fields of Dots
Are Moving
206
MOTION PERCEPTION AND EXPERIENCE
208
Biological Motion
208
Apparent Motion: The Occlusion Heuristic
209
Apparent Motion: Limits Imposed by the Human Body
210
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: IMPLIED MOTION
21 1
TEST YOURSELF
9.2 212
THINK ABOUT IT
212
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
2 12
KEY TERMS
2 13
VIRTUAL LAB
213
PERCEPTION AND ACTION
215
THE ECOLOGICAL APPROACH TO PERCEPTION
21 6
The Beginnings of the Ecological Approach
216
Optic Flow
216
Texture Gradients
21 8
Affordances
219
NAVIGATING THROUGH THE ENVIRONMENT
2
Ì
9
Do People Use Flow Information?
219
Flow Is Not Always Necessary for Determining Heading
219
Flow, Posture, and Balance
220
Demonstration: Keeping Your Balance
220
The Physiology of Navigation: Neurons in the Brain
221
TEST YOURSELF
10.1 223
SKILLED ACTIONS
224
Somersaulting
224
Catching a Fly Ball
225
PHYSIOLOGICAL LINKS BETWEEN SENSORY
AND MOTOR FUNCTIONS
226
Effect of Damage to the Parietal Lobe
226
Properties of Neurons in the Parietal Lobe
226
Mirror Neurons in Premotor Cortex
227
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
ARE WE WATCHING THE SAME MOVIE?
228
TEST YOURSELF
10.2 229
THINK ABOUT IT
229
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
230
KEY TERMS
23 1
VIRTUAL LAB
23 1
SOUND, THE AUDITORY SYSTEM,
AND PITCH PERCEPTION
233
PRESSURE WAVES AND PERCEPTUAL EXPERIENCE
235
The Sound Stimulus Produced by a Loudspeaker
235
Amplitude and Loudness
236
Frequency and Pitch
237
The Range of Hearing
238
Sound Quality: Timbre
239
ГЕЅГ
YOURSELF
11.1 241
XIV
Contents
THE EAR
241
The Outer Ear
241
The Middle Ear
242
The Inner Ear
243
THE COCHLEA
245
Békésy s
Place Theory of Hearing
246
Evidence for Place Theory
247
Method: Neural Frequency Tuning Curves
247
Method: Auditory Masking
248
Updating
Békésy
249
The
Basilar
Membrane as a Frequency Analyzer
250
Method: Psychophysical Tuning Curves
250
How the Timing of Neural Firing Can Signal Frequency
252
TEST YOURSELF
11.2 253
CENTRAL AUDITORY PROCESSING
253
Pathway From the Cochlea to the Cortex
253
Auditory Areas in the Cortex
254
What and Where Streams for Hearing
254
THE AUDITORY CORTEX AND PERCEPTION
256
Perceiving Pitch and Complex Sounds
256
The Effect of the Missing Fundamental
257
How the Auditory Cortex Is Shaped by Experience
258
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: COCHLEAR IMPLANTS —
WHERE SCIENCE AND CULTURE MEET
259
The Technology
259
The Controversy
260
TEST YOURSELF
11.3 261
THINK ABOUT IT
261
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
26 1
KEY TERMS
262
VIRTUAL LAB
262
SOUND LOCALIZATION AND
THE AUDITORY SCENE
265
AUDITORY LOCALIZATION
266
Demonstration: Sound Localization
266
Cues for Location: Signals Reaching the Ears
267
Cues for Location: Effects on Behavior
269
Method: Virtual Auditory Space
269
Judging Elevation and Other Ambiguous Locations
271
THE PHYSIOLOGICAL REPRESENTATION
OF AUDITORY SPACE
272
Interaural Time Difference Detectors
272
Topographic Maps
272
The Cortex
273
TEST YOURSELF
12.1 274
IDENTIFYING SOUND SOURCES
274
Auditory Scene Analysis
274
Principles of Auditory Grouping
275
HEARING INSIDE ROOMS
278
Perceiving Two Sounds That Reach the Ears at
Different Times
279
Demonstration: The Precedence Effect
280
Architectural Acoustics
280
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: INTERACTIONS BETWEEN
VISION AND HEARING
281
TEST YOURSELF
12.2 282
THINK ABOUT IT
282
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
282
KEY TERMS
283
VIRTUAL LAB
283
Contents
|
adam_txt |
BRIEF
CONTENTS
1
INTRODUCTION TO PERCEPTION
3 1 0
PERCEPTION AND ACTION
215
2
INTRODUCTION TO THE
PHYSIOLOGY OF PERCEPTION
21
3
NEURONS AND PERCEPTION
45
4
THE ORGANIZED BRAIN
71
5
PERCEIVING OBJECTS
93
6
VISUAL ATTENTION
121
7
PERCEIVING COLOR
141
8
PERCEIVING DEPTH AND SIZE
167
9
PERCEIVING MOVEMENT
195
1 1
SOUND, THE AUDITORY SYSTEM,
AND PITCH PERCEPTION
233
1 2
SOUND LOCALIZATION AND
THE AUDITORY SCENE
265
1 3
SPEECH PERCEPTION
285
1 4
THE CUTANEOUS SENSES
303
1 5
THE CHEMICAL SENSES
327
1
Ó
PERCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT
351
Appendix
SIGNAL DETECTION:
PROCEDURE AND THEORY
373
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION TO PERCEPTION
3
WHY READ THIS BOOK?
4
THE PERCEPTUAL PROCESS
5
Environmental Stimuli and Attended Stimuli
6
The Stimulus on the Receptors
6
Transduction
6
Neural Processing
7
Perception
7
Recognition
7
Action
8
Knowledge
8
Demonstration: Perceiving a Picture
8
HOW TO APPROACH THE STUDY OF PERCEPTION
9
Levels of Analysis
10
Communication Between the Levels of Analysis
11
MEASURING PERCEPTION
12
Description
12
Recognition
12
Method: Recognition
12
Detection
12
Method: Determining the Absolute Threshold
13
Method: Determining the Difference Threshold
14
Demonstration: Measuring the Difference Threshold
14
Magnitude Estimation
15
Method: Magnitude Estimation
15
Search
16
Other Methods of Measurement
16
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
HOW TO GET THE MOST OUT OF THIS BOOK
16
TEST YOURSELF
1.1 17
THINK ABOUT IT
17
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
1 8
KEY TERMS
18
VIRTUAL LAB
18
INTRODUCTION TO THE
PHYSIOLOGY OF PERCEPTION
21
THE BRAIN: THE MIND'S COMPUTER
22
Early History of the Physiological Approach
22
Basic Structure of the Brain
24
NEURONS: COMMUNICATION AND PROCESSING
24
Recording Electrical Signals in Neurons
25
Method: Recording From a Neuron
25
Basic Properties of Action Potentials
27
Events at the Synapse
27
VISION BEGINS IN THE EYE
28
Light Is the Stimulus for Vision
29
Images Are Focused on the Retina
30
Demonstration: Becoming Aware of What Is in Focus
3 1
ix
TRANSFORMING LIGHT INTO ELECTRICITY
32
The Rod and Cone Receptors
32
Demonstration: "Seeing" the Blind Spot
32
Transduction of Light Into Electricity
33
TEST YOURSELF
2.1 36
PIGMENTS AND PERCEPTION
36
Dark Adaptation of the Rods and Cones
36
Method: Measuring Dark Adaptation
37
Spectral Sensitivity of the Rods and Cones
39
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
TRANSFORMATIONS AND RECEPTORS
41
TEST YOURSELF
2.2 41
THINK ABOUT IT
4 1
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
42
KEY TERMS
42
VIRTUAL LAB
43
NEURONS AND PERCEPTION
45
CONVERGENCE: MANY NEURONS
SENDING SIGNALS TO ONE NEURON
46
Convergence in the Retina
46
Why Rods Result in Greater Sensitivity Than Cones
46
Why We Use Our Cones to See Details
48
Demonstration: Foveal Versus Peripheral Acuity
48
INHIBITION: HOW ACTIVITY IN ONE NEURON CAN
DECREASE ACTIVITY IN ANOTHER ONE
49
What the Horseshoe Crab Teaches Us About Inhibition
49
Lateral Inhibition and Lightness Perception
50
Demonstration: Creating
Mach
Bands in Shadows
52
Demonstration: Simultaneous Contrast
53
Displays That Can't Be Explained by Lateral Inhibition
54
TEST YOURSELF
3. 1 55
NEURAL PROCESSING:
INTERACTIONS BETWEEN NEURONS
55
Excitation, Inhibition, and Neural Responding
56
Introduction to Receptive Fields
57
Method: Determining a Neuron's Receptive Field
57
Processing Past the Retina
58
DO FEATURE DETECTORS PLAY A ROLE
IN PERCEPTION?
62
Selective Adaptation and Feature Detectors
62
Method: Selective Adaptation
62
Method: Determining Contrast Sensitivity
63
Demonstration: Adaptation to Size
64
Selective Rearing and Feature Detectors
65
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
PERCEPTION AS INDIRECT
66
TEST YOURSELF
3.2 67
THINK ABOUT IT
67
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
67
KEY TERMS
68
VIRTUAL LAB
68
THE ORGANIZED BRAIN
71
MAPS: REPRESENTING SPATIAL LAYOUT
72
Method: Determining Retinotopic Map by
Recording From Neurons
72
The Map on the Cortex
73
Method: Brain Imaging
73
COLUMNS: ORGANIZING FOR LOCATION,
ORIENTATION, AND OCULAR DOMINANCE
75
The LGN "Club Sandwich"
75
Location Columns in the Cortex
75
Orientation Columns in the Cortex
75
Ocular Dominance Columns in the Cortex
76
How Is an Object Represented in the
Striate
Cortex?
76
Contents
STREAMS: PATHWAYS FOR WHAT, WHERE, AND HOW
Streams for Information About What and Where
77
Method: Ablation
78
Streams for Information About What and How
80
Method: Dissociations in Neuropsychology
80
TEST YOURSELF
4. 1 82
MODULARITY: STRUCTURES FOR
FACES, PLACES, AND BODIES
82
There Are Face Neurons in the Monkey's IT Cortex
82
Damage to the Temporal Lobe Affects a Person's Ability
to Recognize Faces
83
There Are Areas for Faces, Places, and Bodies
83
EVOLUTION AND PLASTICITY:
HOW DO NEURONS BECOME SPECIALIZED?
84
Is Neural Selectivity Shaped by Evolution?
84
How Neurons Can Be Shaped by Experience
85
THE SENSORY CODE: HOW THE ENVIRONMENT IS
REPRESENTED IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
86
Coding by Neurons and Groups of Neurons
86
Coding by Distributed Activity in the Brain
88
77
Objects Look Different From Different Viewpoints
96
The Reasons for Changes in Lightness and Darkness
Can Be Unclear
97
THE
GESTALT
APPROACH TO OBJECT PERCEPTION
97
Demonstration: Making Illusory Contours Vanish
98
The
Gestalt
Laws of Perceptual Organization
99
Demonstration: Finding Faces in a Landscape
101
Neurons That Respond to Grouping
102
The
Gestalt
"Laws" Are More Accurately Described
as "Heuristics"
102
PERCEPTUAL SEGREGATION:
HOW OBJECTS ARE SEPARATED
103
What Are the Properties of Figure and Ground?
103
Demonstration: Judging Similarity
104
What Factors Determine Which Area Is Figure?
104
How Do Neurons Respond to Figure and Ground?
105
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
ARE THERE GANDMOTHER CELLS AFTER ALL?
TEST YOURSELF
4.2 90
THINK ABOUT IT
90
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
90
KEY TERMS
91
VIRTUAL LAB
91
89
TEST YOURSELF
5.1 106
106
PERCEIVING OBJECTS
93
MODERN RESEARCH ON OBJECT PERCEPTION
Why Does the Visual System Respond Best to
Specific Types of Stimuli?
106
Must a Figure Be Separated From Ground Before
We Can Recognize Objects?
107
How Do We Recognize Objects From Different
Viewpoints?
108
How Does the Brain Process Information About Objects?
1 1 1
Method: Region-of-lnterest Approach I
12
Method: How to Present a Stimulus Briefly
1 12
Method: Preparing Stimuli by Morphing
1 13
Method: Delayed-Matching-to-Sample
1 13
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: THE INTELLIGENCE
OF HUMAN OBJECT PERCEPTION
1 14
Early Ideas About Perceptual Intelligence
1 15
Modern Ideas About Perceptual Intelligence
1 15
Demonstration: Shape From Shading
1 16
TEST YOURSELF
5.2 117
THINK ABOUT IT
117
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
1 18
KEY TERMS
1 1 8
VIRTUAL LAB
118
THE CHALLENGE OF OBJECT PERCEPTION
94
The Stimulus on the Receptors Is Ambiguous
95
Objects Can Be Hidden or Blurred
95
Contents
VISUAL
ATTENTION
121
PERCEIVING COLOR
141
ATTENTION AND PERCEIVING THE ENVIRONMENT
Why Is Selective Attention Necessary?
122
How Is Selective Attention Achieved?
123
Scanning a Scene
123
IS ATTENTION NECESSARY FOR PERCEPTION?
125
When Can Perception Occur Without Attention?
125
When Is Attention Necessary for Perception?
126
Demonstration: Change Detection
127
TEST YOURSELF
6.1 129
DOES ATTENTION ENHANCE PERCEPTION?
129
Effects of Attention on Information Processing
129
Effects of Attention on Perception
131
ATTENTION AND EXPERIENCING A
COHERENT WORLD
131
Why Is Binding Necessary?
131
Feature Integration Theory
132
Method: Searching for Conjunctions
134
The Physiological Approach to Binding
134
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF ATTENTION
135
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
DO NEURONS NOTICE STIMULI?
1 36
TEST YOURSELF
6.2 137
THINK ABOUT IT
137
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
138
KEY TERMS
139
У
L
VIRTUAL
LAB 139
122
INTRODUCTION TO COLOR
142
What Are Some Functions of Color Vision?
142
How Can We Describe Color Experience?
143
What Is the Relationship Between Wavelength and
Color Perception?
144
TRICHROMATIC THEORY OF COLOR VISION
146
Behavioral Evidence for the Theory
146
The Theory: Vision Is Trichromatic
146
Physiology of Trichromatic Theory
147
TEST YOURSELF
7.1 151
COLOR DEFICIENCY
151
Monochromatism
152
Dichromatism
152
Physiological Mechanisms of Receptor-Based
Color Deficiency
152
OPPONENT-PROCESS THEORY OF COLOR VISION
153
Behavioral Evidence for the Theory
153
Demonstration: "Opposing" Afterimages
153
Demonstration: Afterimages and Simultaneous
Contrast
153
Demonstration: Visualization and Color Scaling
154
The Theory: Vision Is an "Opponent" Process
154
The Physiology of Opponent-Process Vision
154
COLOR IN THE CORTEX
155
TEST YOURSELF
7.2 156
PERCEIVING COLORS UNDER CHANGING
ILLUMINATION
156
Demonstration: Color Perception Under Changing
Illumination
157
Chromatic Adaptation
157
Demonstration: Adapting to Red
157
The Effect of the Surroundings
158
Demonstration: Color and the Surroundings
158
Memory and Color
158
Contents
LIGHTNESS CONSTANCY
159
Intensity Relationships: The Ratio Principle
160
Lightness Perception Under Uneven Illumination
160
Demonstration: The Penumbra and Lightness
Perception
16 1
Demonstration: Perceiving Lightness at a Corner
161
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
CREATING COLOR EXPERIENCE
162
TEST YOURSELF
7.3 163
THINK ABOUT IT
163
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
164
KEY TERMS
165
VIRTUAL LAB
165
PERCEIVING DEPTH AND SIZE
167
OCULOMOTOR CUES
169
Demonstration: Feelings in Your Eyes
169
MONOCULAR CUES
169
Pictorial Cues
169
Movement-Produced Cues
171
BINOCULAR DEPTH INFORMATION
173
Binocular Disparity
173
Demonstration: Two Eyes: Two Viewpoints
173
Demonstration: Binocular Depth From a Picture,
Without a Stereoscope
176
The Correspondence Problem
177
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF DEPTH PERCEPTION
178
Neurons That Respond to Pictorial Depth
178
Neurons That Respond to Binocular Disparity
178
Connecting Binocular Disparity and Depth Perception
179
TEST YOURSELF
8.1 179
PERCEIVING SIZE
179
The Holway and Boring Experiment
1 80
Size Constancy
182
Demonstration: Perceiving Size at a Distance
Demonstration: Size-Distance Scaling and
Emmert's Law
183
183
VISUAL ILLUSIONS
185
The
Müller-Lyer
Illusion
185
Demonstration: Measuring the
Müller-Lyer
Illusion
185
Demonstration: The
Müller-Lyer
Illusion With Books
186
The
Ponzo
Illusion
1 87
The Ames Room
1 87
The Moon Illusion
188
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
DISTANCE PERCEPTION DEPENDS
ON THE ENVIRONMENT AND ON THE SELF!
1 89
TEST YOURSELF
8.2 190
THINK ABOUT IT
190
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
191
KEY TERMS
192
VIRTUAL LAB
192
PERCEIVING MOVEMENT
195
STUDYING MOVEMENT PERCEPTION
196
197
THE FUNCTIONS OF MOTION PERCEPTION
Surviving to Perceive Another Day
197
Perceiving Objects
197
Demonstration: Perceiving a Camouflaged Bird
197
Demonstration: The Kinetic Depth Effect With a
Paper Clip
199
THE MOVING OBSERVER
199
The Behavioral Approach: Taking Environmental Information
Into Account
200
Contents
The Physiological Approach: The Corollary Discharge
201
Demonstration: Eliminating the Image Movement Signal
With an Afterimage
202
Demonstration: Seeing Movement by Pushing on
Your Eyeball
203
TEST YOURSELF
9.1 204
HOW NEURONS SIGNAL THE DIRECTION
OF MOVEMENT
204
Determining the Direction in Which Oriented Bars
Are Moving
204
Demonstration: Movement of a Bar Across
an Aperture
205
Determining the Direction in Which Fields of Dots
Are Moving
206
MOTION PERCEPTION AND EXPERIENCE
208
Biological Motion
208
Apparent Motion: The Occlusion Heuristic
209
Apparent Motion: Limits Imposed by the Human Body
210
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: IMPLIED MOTION
21 1
TEST YOURSELF
9.2 212
THINK ABOUT IT
212
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
2 12
KEY TERMS
2 13
VIRTUAL LAB
213
PERCEPTION AND ACTION
215
THE ECOLOGICAL APPROACH TO PERCEPTION
21 6
The Beginnings of the Ecological Approach
216
Optic Flow
216
Texture Gradients
21 8
Affordances
219
NAVIGATING THROUGH THE ENVIRONMENT
2
Ì
9
Do People Use Flow Information?
219
Flow Is Not Always Necessary for Determining Heading
219
Flow, Posture, and Balance
220
Demonstration: Keeping Your Balance
220
The Physiology of Navigation: Neurons in the Brain
221
TEST YOURSELF
10.1 223
SKILLED ACTIONS
224
Somersaulting
224
Catching a Fly Ball
225
PHYSIOLOGICAL LINKS BETWEEN SENSORY
AND MOTOR FUNCTIONS
226
Effect of Damage to the Parietal Lobe
226
Properties of Neurons in the Parietal Lobe
226
Mirror Neurons in Premotor Cortex
227
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER:
ARE WE WATCHING THE SAME MOVIE?
228
TEST YOURSELF
10.2 229
THINK ABOUT IT
229
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
230
KEY TERMS
23 1
VIRTUAL LAB
23 1
SOUND, THE AUDITORY SYSTEM,
AND PITCH PERCEPTION
233
PRESSURE WAVES AND PERCEPTUAL EXPERIENCE
235
The Sound Stimulus Produced by a Loudspeaker
235
Amplitude and Loudness
236
Frequency and Pitch
237
The Range of Hearing
238
Sound Quality: Timbre
239
ГЕЅГ
YOURSELF
11.1 241
XIV
Contents
THE EAR
241
The Outer Ear
241
The Middle Ear
242
The Inner Ear
243
THE COCHLEA
245
Békésy's
Place Theory of Hearing
246
Evidence for Place Theory
247
Method: Neural Frequency Tuning Curves
247
Method: Auditory Masking
248
Updating
Békésy
249
The
Basilar
Membrane as a Frequency Analyzer
250
Method: Psychophysical Tuning Curves
250
How the Timing of Neural Firing Can Signal Frequency
252
TEST YOURSELF
11.2 253
CENTRAL AUDITORY PROCESSING
253
Pathway From the Cochlea to the Cortex
253
Auditory Areas in the Cortex
254
What and Where Streams for Hearing
254
THE AUDITORY CORTEX AND PERCEPTION
256
Perceiving Pitch and Complex Sounds
256
The Effect of the Missing Fundamental
257
How the Auditory Cortex Is Shaped by Experience
258
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: COCHLEAR IMPLANTS —
WHERE SCIENCE AND CULTURE MEET
259
The Technology
259
The Controversy
260
TEST YOURSELF
11.3 261
THINK ABOUT IT
261
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
26 1
KEY TERMS
262
VIRTUAL LAB
262
SOUND LOCALIZATION AND
THE AUDITORY SCENE
265
AUDITORY LOCALIZATION
266
Demonstration: Sound Localization
266
Cues for Location: Signals Reaching the Ears
267
Cues for Location: Effects on Behavior
269
Method: Virtual Auditory Space
269
Judging Elevation and Other "Ambiguous" Locations
271
THE PHYSIOLOGICAL REPRESENTATION
OF AUDITORY SPACE
272
Interaural Time Difference Detectors
272
Topographic Maps
272
The Cortex
273
TEST YOURSELF
12.1 274
IDENTIFYING SOUND SOURCES
274
Auditory Scene Analysis
274
Principles of Auditory Grouping
275
HEARING INSIDE ROOMS
278
Perceiving Two Sounds That Reach the Ears at
Different Times
279
Demonstration: The Precedence Effect
280
Architectural Acoustics
280
SOMETHING TO CONSIDER: INTERACTIONS BETWEEN
VISION AND HEARING
281
TEST YOURSELF
12.2 282
THINK ABOUT IT
282
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW MORE
282
KEY TERMS
283
VIRTUAL LAB
283
Contents |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 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 | BV023018503 |
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 ST 300 |
classification_tum | PHY 825f BIO 782f BIO 781f |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)494357750 (DE-599)BVBBV023018503 |
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 | Physik Biologie Informatik Psychologie |
discipline_str_mv | Physik Biologie Informatik Psychologie |
edition | 7. ed., internat. student ed., [Nachdr.] |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV023018503 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T19:12:07Z |
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isbn | 9780495187783 049518778X |
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physical | XXIX, 438 S. Ill., graf. Darst. |
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spelling | Goldstein, E. Bruce 1941- Verfasser (DE-588)115238255 aut Sensation and perception E. Bruce Goldstein 7. ed., internat. student ed., [Nachdr.] Belmont, Calif. Thomson Wadsworth 2007 XXIX, 438 S. Ill., graf. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Perception ram Sens et sensations ram Perception Senses and sensation Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd rswk-swf Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 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 3\p DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016222625&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 3\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Goldstein, E. Bruce 1941- Sensation and perception Perception ram Sens et sensations ram Perception Senses and sensation Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4079011-3 (DE-588)4064317-7 (DE-588)4151278-9 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Sensation and perception |
title_auth | Sensation and perception |
title_exact_search | Sensation and perception |
title_exact_search_txtP | 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 | Perception ram Sens et sensations ram Perception Senses and sensation Wahrnehmungspsychologie (DE-588)4079011-3 gnd Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Perception Sens et sensations Senses and sensation Wahrnehmungspsychologie Wahrnehmung Einführung Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016222625&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT goldsteinebruce sensationandperception |