Examples of Perception in the following topics:
-
Sensation to Perception
- Sensation and perception are two distinct stages of processing during human sensing.
- Transduction can be likened to a bridge connecting sensation to perception.
- The resulting mental recreation of the distal stimulus is the percept.
- Perception is particularly important to our ability to understand speech.
- These are two optical illusions that illustrate how perception may differ from reality.
-
Sensory Modalities
- Taste perception is created by combining multiple sensory inputs.
- Different modalities help determine the perception of taste.
- Multimodal perception comes into effect when a unimodal stimulus fails to produce a response.
- Proprioception and touch are related in subtle ways, and their impairment results in deep and surprising deficits in perception and action.
- This is a diagram of how multimodal perception is created by the overlapping and combining of different inputs from the sensory systems.
-
Optic (II) Nerve
- The optic nerve transmits all visual information including brightness perception, color perception, and contrast.
-
Overview of Sensation
- Hearing or audition (audioception) is the sense of sound perception.
- The sense of taste is often confused with the concept of flavor, which is a combination of taste and smell perception.
- Touch or somatosensation (tactioception, tactition, or mechanoreception), is a perception resulting from the activation of neural receptors in the skin, including hair follicles, tongue, throat, and mucosa.
- According to psychologists and neuroscientists, however, human brains have a system governing the perception of time.
-
Somatic Sensory Pathways to the Cerebellum
- A sensory system consists of sensory receptors, neural pathways, and the parts of the brain involved in sensory perception.
- In short, senses are transducers from the physical world to the realm of the mind where we interpret the information, creating our perception of the world around us.
-
Proprioceptive Sensations
- It is distinguished from exteroception, perception of the outside world, and interoception, perception of pain, hunger, and the movement of internal organs, etc.
-
Organization of the Nervous System
- The connections of these neurons form neural circuits that are responsible for our perceptions of the world and determine our behavior.
-
Phantom Limb Sensation
- Ramachandran and colleagues illustrated this theory by showing that stroking different parts of the face led to perceptions of being touched on different parts of the missing limb.
- Ramachandran argued that the perception of being touched on different parts of the phantom limb was the perceptual correlate of cortical reorganization in the brain.
-
Cerebral Lobes
- The temporal lobe is involved in primary auditory perception such as hearing and holds the primary auditory cortex.
- Anterior parts of this ventral stream for visual processing are involved in object perception and recognition.
-
The Anterior Pituitary
- Beta-endorphin is a polypeptide that effects the opioid receptor, whose effects include the inhibition of the perception of pain.