PSYCH-190 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Depth Perception, Cochlear Implant, Haptic Perception
Document Summary
Haptic perception: active exploration of the environment by touching and grasping objects with our hands. Sensing sound experience differences from objective reality. Illusions: errors of perception, memory, or judgment in which subjective. When you view two objects that project the same retinal image size, the object. We experience a sense of motion through the differences in the strengths of output from motion-sensitive neurons. These processes can give rise to illusions such as apparent motion. Change blindness and inattentional blindness occur when we fail to notice visible and even salient of our environment, emphasizing that our conscious visual experience depends on focused attention. relative vacuum. Pitch: how high or low a sound is. Sound waves: changes in air pressure unfolding over time. Pure tone: a simple sound wave that first increases air pressure and then creative a. Frequency (sound wave) depends on how often peak in air pressure passes the ear.