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Chapter 2

Chapter 2 . Perceptual Processes I: Visual and Auditory Recognition. Background on Visual Object Recognition. object recognition pattern recognition. Background on Visual Object Recognition. The Visual System distal stimulus proximal stimulus Retina Functional stimulus sensory memory

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Chapter 2

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  1. Chapter 2 Perceptual Processes I: Visual and Auditory Recognition

  2. Background on Visual Object Recognition • object recognition • pattern recognition

  3. Background on Visual Object Recognition • The Visual System • distal stimulus • proximal stimulus • Retina • Functional stimulus • sensory memory • iconic memory, visual sensory memory • primary visual cortex

  4. Background on Visual Object Recognition • Organization in Visual Perception • Gestalt Psychology • figure • ground • ambiguous figure-ground relationship • Explanation for Figure-Ground Reversal • adaptation of neurons in visual cortex • people try to solve the visual paradox

  5. Background on Visual Object Recognition • Organization in Visual Perception • Illusory Contours (subjective contours) • Human perception is more than the sum of the information in the distal stimulus.

  6. Background on Visual Object Recognition • Theories of Visual Object Recognition • templates • Feature-Analysis Theory • distinctive feature • compare new letter to stored list of distinctive features

  7. Background on Visual Object Recognition • Theories of Visual Object Recognition • Feature-Analysis Theory • Eleanor Gibson's research • time required to decide if two letters are different • recognizing letters and numbers on envelopes

  8. Background on Visual Object Recognition • Theories of Visual Object Recognition • Feature-Analysis Theory • Hubel and Wiesel's research • measure response of single neuron to simple visual stimulus • retinal region and orientation • feature detectors

  9. Background on Visual Object Recognition • Theories of Visual Object Recognition • Feature-Analysis Theory • Problems with feature-analysis approach • complex shapes in nature • relationship between features • distortion of features with movement

  10. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • The Distinction Between Bottom-Up Processing and Top-Down Processing • bottom-up processing—emphasizes stimulus characteristics • top-down processing—emphasizes concepts, expectations, memory

  11. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • The Distinction Between Bottom-Up Processing and Top-Down Processing • Top-down processing is strong when a stimulus is registered for just a fraction of a second. • Top-down processing is alsostrong when stimuli are incomplete or ambiguous. • Object recognition combines bottom-up and top-down processing.

  12. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • Top-Down Processing and Reading • Context helps us recognize letters of the alphabet during reading. • We don't read letter-by-letter. • Analyzing all the individual features in the letters of words would be too much work for the perceptual processes.

  13. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • Top-Down Processing and Reading • We can still manage to read a sentence, even if some of the middle letters in a word have been rearranged. • word superiority effect

  14. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • Top-Down Processing and Reading • The context of a sentence facilitates the recognition of a word in a sentence. • Rueckl and Oden's bears/beans experiment • Both bottom-up and top-down processing operate in a coordinated fashion.

  15. Insert Figure 2.6 here

  16. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • In Depth: Overactive Top-Down Processing and "Smart Mistakes" in Object Recognition • Change Blindness • fail to detect a change in an object or a scene • Simons and Levin's stranger-and-the-door study

  17. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • In Depth: Overactive Top-Down Processing (continued) • Change Blindness • Detecting the difference between two scenes • Top-down processing encourages us to assume that the basic meaning of the scene will remain stable. • important changes identified more quickly • do not store a detailed representation of a scene

  18. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • In Depth: Overactive Top-Down Processing (continued) • Inattentional Blindness • fail to notice when an unexpected but completely visible object suddenly appears • Simons and Chabris's basketball study • awareness test • monkeybusiness

  19. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • In Depth: Overactive Top-Down Processing (continued) • Reconciling "Smart Mistakes" in Object Recognition • ecological validity • Perceptual representations change rapidly; the visual system does not track each detail.

  20. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • In Depth: Overactive Top-Down Processing (continued) • Reconciling "Smart Mistakes" in Object Recognition • Thevisual system is fairly accurate in creating the "gist" or general interpretation of a scene. • focus on what is important

  21. Top-Down Processing and Visual Object Recognition • In Depth: Overactive Top-Down Processing (continued) • Reconciling "Smart Mistakes" in Object Recognition • Theme 2: Our cognitive errors can often be traced to the use of a rational strategy

  22. Face Perception • should be a challenging task • need to recognize faces from different angles, in different settings, with different expressions

  23. Face Perception • Recognizing Faces Versus Recognizing Other Objects • face perception as "special" • Tanaka and Farah—facial features in context vs. isolation • feature identification vs. holistic approach • gestalt

  24. Face Perception • Neuroscience Research on Face Recognition • prosopagnosia • inferotemporal cortex • face recognition cells in monkeys • fMRI studies • brain's response to faces in upright and upside-down positions • face-inversion effect Thatcher illusion

  25. Face Perception • Applied Research on Face Recognition • cashiers' judgments about ID photos • security surveillance systems • video clips of professors • later recognize from photos • familiarity and expertise

  26. Speech Perception • Speech perception requires the auditory system to: • record sound vibrations of someone talking • translate vibrations into a sequence of sounds that you perceive to be speech • distinguish the sound pattern of one word from all other irrelevant words • separate voice of speaker from background noise, including other conversations

  27. Speech Perception • Characteristics of Speech Perception • phoneme • Four Characteristics of Speech Perception • Listeners can impose boundaries between words, even when these words are not separated by silence. • Phoneme pronunciation varies tremendously.

  28. Speech Perception • Characteristics of Speech Perception • Four Characteristics of Speech Perception • Context allows listeners to fill in some missing sounds. • Visual cues from the speaker’s mouth help us interpret ambiguous sounds.

  29. Speech Perception • Characteristics of Speech Perception • Word Boundaries • The actual acoustical stimulus of spoken language rarely shows clear-cut pauses to mark the boundaries between words. • Listeners use knowledge about language in order to determine the boundaries between words.

  30. Speech Perception • Characteristics of Speech Perception • Variability in Phoneme Pronunciation • Phoneme pronunciation varies tremendously. • pitch, tone, and rate • lack of precision, sloppy pronunciation • coarticulation

  31. Speech Perception • Characteristics of Speech Perception • Context and Speech Perception • Top-down factors influence speech perception. • We use our knowledge of language to help us perceive ambiguous words. • Phonemic restoration • Warren & Warren's wheel/heel/peel study • Role of top-down processing

  32. Speech Perception • Characteristics of Speech Perception • Visual Cues as an Aid to Speech Perception • Visual cues from the speaker’s mouth help us interpret ambiguous sounds. • McGurk effect McGurk effect • compromise between discrepant sources of information • superior temporal sulcus

  33. Speech Perception • Theories of Speech Perception • The Special Mechanism Approach • Humans are born with a specialized device that allows us to decode speech stimuli. • Speech sounds are processed more quickly and accurately than other auditory stimuli. • phonetic module/speech module • categorical perception

  34. Speech Perception • Theories of Speech Perception • The General Mechanism Approach • Humans use the same neural mechanisms to process both speech sounds and nonspeech sounds. • event-related potentials (ERPs) research • phoneme judgment and visual cues

  35. http://www.zedocumentaries.com/brainstorythree

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