perception

10
NATURE OF PERCEPTION FACTORS OF PERCEPTION KINDS OF PERCEPTION PERCEPTION

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NATURE OF PERCEPTION

FACTORS OF PERCEPTION

KINDS OF PERCEPTION

PERCEPTION

“ WE DON’T SEE THINGS AS THEY

ARE, WE SEE THINGS AS WE ARE.”

NATURE OF PERCEPTION

“ The study of perception is concerned with identifying the process

through which we interpret and organize sensory information to

produce our conscious experience of objects and object relationship.”

“ Perception is the process of receiving information about and making

sense of the world around us. It involves deciding which information

to notice, how to categorize this information and how to interpret it

within the framework of existing knowledge.

“ A process by which individuals organize and interpret their sensory

impressions in order to give meaning to their environment.

“Perception is a complex cognitive process this is concerned with

selection, organization and interpretation of stimuli”

The Perceptual Process

1.Sensation

An individual’s ability to

detect stimuli in the

immediate

environment.

2.Selection

The process a person

uses to eliminate some

of the stimuli that have

been sensed and to

retain others for further

processing.

3.Organization

The process of placing

selected perceptual

stimuli into a

framework for

“storage.”

4.Translation

The stage of the

perceptual process at

which stimuli are

interpreted and given

meaning.

Receiving Stimuli

(External & Internal)

Selecting Stimuli

External factors : Nature,

Location,Size,contrast,

Movement,repetition,similarity

Internal factors : Learning,

needs,age,Interest,

Organizing

Figure Background ,

Perceptual Grouping

( similarity, proximity,

closure, continuity)

Response

Covert: Attitudes ,

Motivation,

Feeling

Overt: Behavior

Perceptual Process

Interpreting

Attribution ,Stereotyping,

Halo Effect, Projection

FACTORS INFLUENCING PERCEPTIONSubjective Factors/

Factors in the perceiver

• Attitudes

• Motives

• Interests

• Experience

• Expectations

Perception

Objective factors/

Factors in the Target

• Novelty

• Motion

• Sounds

• Size

• Background

• Proximity

• Similarity

Social or cultural factors

•Social

•Cultural

•prejudice

We are required to perceive objects in different manners as

compared to their position in the environment.

Objects maybe moving or stationary when we have to

perceive motion. We may have to locate sounds and voices

in the space around us. We are also suppose to perceive

form, figure, depth and distance of objects.

Types of perception

1) Form perception

2) Size perception/ perception constancy

3) Motion perception

4) Depth perception

5) Time perception

TYPES OR KINDS OF PERCEPTION

FORM PERCEPTION

We do not perceive the world around us as

patches of colour, variation in bight-ness ,or

loud sounds and voices. Instead we see trees,

tables, buildings and cars; we hear automobile

horns, footsteps and words.

Perception is a unified experience. If we look at

a clock, for example, we don’t see parts, we

perceive the whole instrument that we

recognize as timepiece

TIME PERCEPTION We often perceive time in our normal daily life. Perception of time is less in children than in elders.

Time perception is a field of study within psychology and neuroscience that refers to the subjective experience of time, which is measured by someone's own perception of the duration of the indefinite and continuous unfolding of events. The perceived time interval between two successive events is referred to as perceived duration. Another person's perception of time cannot be directly experienced or understood, but it can be objectively studied and inferred through a number of scientific experiments.

DEPTH PERCEPTION

• Depth perception also acts as one of the types of perception psychology. It relates to the way the human eye identifies and contextualizes things in space.

• Depth perception is the visual ability to perceive the world in three dimensions (3D) and the distance of an object.

• For instance, though the naked eye cannot see the end of a tunnel, it interprets its possible depth through past experiences such as scientific measurements to know how deep the tunnel can be.