Perception in Psychology – UGC NET – Notes

TOPIC INFOUGC NET (Psychology)

SUB-TOPIC INFO  Attention, Perception, Learning, Memory and Forgetting (UNIT 5)

CONTENT TYPE Detailed Notes

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1. Introduction

2. Stages of Perception

3. Approaches to the Study of Perception

3.1. Physiological Approach

3.2. Cognitive Perspective

3.3. Ecological Approach

3.4. Constructivist Approach

3.5. Gestalt Approach

4. Theoretical Approaches to Perception

5. Sensation

6. Role of Attention in Perception

7. Law of Organisation: Gestalt Principles

7.1. Figure-Ground Relationship

7.2. Law of Proximity

7.3. Law of Continuity or Good Continuation

7.4. Law of Closure

7.5. Law of Common Region/Common Fate

7.6. Law of Good Form/Pragnaz

8. Perceptual Constancy

8.1. Size Constancy

8.2. Shape Constancy

8.3. Colour or Brightness Constancy

9. Factors Affecting Perception

9.1. Effect of Motivation or Need

9.2. Effect of Expectation or Perceptual Expectancy

9.3. Effect of Emotions

9.4. Effect of Stimulus Characteristic

9.5. Effect of Experience

9.6. Effect of the Culture

10. Perception of Depth and Distance

10.1. Monocular Cues

10.2. Binocular Cues

11. Movement Perception

12. Size Perception

13. Errors in Perception

14. Types of Illusion

14.1. Muller-lyre Illusion

14.2. Ponzo Illusion

14.3. Ebbinghaus Illusion

14.4. The Ames Room Illusion

14.5. The Moon Illusion

15. Role of Motivation and Learning in Perception

15.1. Role of Motivation in Perception

15.2. Role of Learning in Perception

16. Signal Detection Theory

16.1. Introduction and Scope

16.2. History of Signal Detection Theory

16.3. The Mechanics of Signal Detection Theory

16.4 Signal Detection Theory Example

16.5. Applications of Signal Detection Theory

17. Subliminal Perception and Related Factors, Information Processing Approach

17.1. Debate Over Terms and Methodology

17.2. Just-Noticeable Differences

17.3. Exclusion Paradigm

17.4. Conclusion

18. Information Processing

18.1. Basic Assumption

18.2. Information Processing and Selective Attention

18.3. Critical Evaluation

19. Culture and Perception

20. Perceptual Styles

20.1. Visual Learning Style

20.2. Auditory Learning Style

20.3. Tactile or Kinesthetic Learning Style

21. Perceptual Styles

22. Ecological Theory of Perception

22.1. Meaning of Perception

22.2. Affordances

22.3. Direct Perception

22.4. The Role of Context

22.5. Implications for Design and Learning

22.6. Gibson’s Ecological Theory

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Perception

UGC NET PSYCHOLOGY

Attention, Perception, Learning, Memory and Forgetting (UNIT 5)

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Table of Contents

Introduction

  • The psychological process responsible for our interpretation of the world is known as perception. Perception is a set of processes that help us understand the world around us. Every second, we encounter numerous stimuli. For example, in a room, you may notice walls, colours, sounds, objects, and more. Your awareness of these is due to a higher mental process called perception.
  • Perception helps us in interpreting information and making appropriate decisions, from simple choices like what to wear to complex ones like how to cross a road. Thus, perception can be defined as the process of selecting, organising, and interpreting sensory information, based on past experiences, expectations, and needs.
  • When you try to visualize your kitchen, you may not recall every detail. This is because the brain cannot process all available information at once and instead focuses on selected stimuli.
  • For instance, while crossing a busy road, you pay attention to important stimuli such as traffic signals, moving vehicles, and people, while ignoring less relevant details like buildings or trees. This shows how perception involves selective attention.

The process of perception can be understood in three main steps:
(i) selection – choosing relevant stimuli,
(ii) organization – arranging information meaningfully, and
(iii) interpretation – understanding and making sense of the situation.

Thus, perception is an active process where the brain filters, structures, and interprets information to guide effective action and decision-making.

Stages of Perception

Stage I: Selection

  • The first stage of perception is selection. Since the brain has limited capacity, it cannot attend to all stimuli at once. Therefore, we either consciously or unconsciously select certain stimuli and ignore others. The selected stimulus is called the attended stimulus.
  • Our interpretation of any figure depends on how we organise information, and this organisation is influenced by attention. For example, in certain images, some people focus on one part while others focus on another.
  • In the case of a figure, some individuals may pay attention to the white area and perceive two human faces, while others may focus on the black area and see a vase.
  • These differences show that individual differences in perception exist, as people may attend to different aspects of the same stimulus, leading to different interpretations.

Stage II: Organization

  • In this stage, stimuli are mentally arranged into a meaningful pattern. This process occurs unconsciously. Several principles have been proposed to explain this process of organisation.
  • The Gestalt principles of organisation help explain how humans naturally organise stimuli to form a meaningful whole, which further aids in interpretation.

Stage III: Interpretation

  • In this last stage, meaning is assigned to the organised stimuli. The interpretation of stimuli depends on one’s experiences, expectations, needs, and beliefs.
  • Thus, this stage is subjective in nature, and the same stimulus can be interpreted differently by different individuals.

Theoretical Approaches to Perception

Two separate theoretical approaches have been proposed by psychologists to explain the process of perception. One is known as “Top-down processing approach” and, other is known as “Bottom-up processing approach”.

Theoretical Approaches to Perception

Bottom-up processingTop-down processing
Process of perception is direct.Process of perception is indirect.
Perception is a data driven process i.e., stimuli carries sufficient information to be interpreted meaningfully and we don’t need to rely on our experiences.Perception is an experience driven process i.e., stimuli don’t have sufficient information to be interpreted meaningfully and therefore, we need to rely on our experiences.
J. J. Gibson was one of the strongest advocate of this view.Richard Gregory was the strongest advocate of this view.

Sensation

  • A closely related term to perception is sensation. Sensation is the first contact we establish with our physical environment. It focuses on the relationship between sensory stimulation (such as electromagnetic waves, sound waves, and pressure) and how these inputs are received by our sense organs—the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin (Baron, 2001).
  • Thus, sensation can be understood as the process of gathering information from the environment through our senses and transmitting it to the brain for further processing. The process of perception, which occurs unconsciously, then interprets this sensory information to make meaning of the world around us.

Process of Sensation:

The process of sensation consists of three main steps.

  • The first step is reception—the process of receiving information such as light, heat, or physical energy through sense organs using specialised sensory receptor cells.
  • The second step is transduction—the process of converting this physical energy into electrical impulses, which is the form of information that can be understood by the brain and nervous system.
  • In the final step, these electrical impulses travel through nerve fibres to the nervous system, where they are interpreted.

Role of Attention in Perception

  • The dish antenna we use in our home receives all available signals from the satellite but the tuner of the television-set selects signal according to our wishes. Similarly, our senses can register numerous stimuli at a given time but attentional processes help us in selecting relevant stimuli responsible for perception.

Following are some important functions of attention in context of perception:

  • Selective attention: The most important function of attention is selectivity. It refers to a process by which attention is focused on stimulus of ongoing interest, while ignoring other irrelevant stimuli. Selective attention acts as a filter.
  • Sustained attention: It is the ability to attend to a stimulus for a longer period of time without being distracted. Job of looking at a radar screen requires sustained attention. Our attentional process helps us in doing this kind of monotonous jobs.

Law of Organisation: Gestalt Principles

  • In the early 20th century, three German psychologists Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang Köhler and Kurt Koffka proposed new principles for explaining perception called as Gestalt principle. According to these psychologists, the process of perception does not involve perceiving an array of stimuli as an object but it involves our tendency to seek a form or pattern in it.
  • The literal meaning of the word Gestalt is form or configuration. The basic premise of Gestalt psychology is that ‘whole is different from the sum of its part’. Based on this basic premise, Gestalt psychologists proposed a number of principles or laws to explain the process of perceptual organisation, i.e., how we perceive smaller units of stimuli as a whole, having a particular pattern.
  • In the following section, let us discuss some important Gestalt laws of perceptual organisation but before doing so, can you find thirteen faces in the following picture?
The Forest Has Eyes by Bev Doolittle (1984)

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