social world we live in affects what our senses pick up
whos study shows that culture effects perception
Hudson's study
Hudsons'sstudy-aim
find out whether different culturespercievedepth cues in 2D images differently
hudson'sstudy-method
showed 2D drawings to black and whitechildren, schooled and unschooled. children were asked which is closer to the man, the elephant or the antelope.
hudson'sstudy-results
black and white schooled ptps more likely to percievedepth than unschooled ptps. white schooled ptps more likely to percievedepth than black schooled ptps.
hudsonsstudy-conclusion
differentcultures use depth cuesdifferently, so have different perceptual sets.
how does emotion affect perception
tendency for our brain to notice exciting things and block threatening things
whose study showed that emotion affects perception
mcginnies
mcginniesstudy-aim
know if anxiety-provoking things are noticed more than neutral things
mcginniesstudy-method
students shows neutral and 'taboo' words. had to say word out loud.emotional arousal levelled through GSR.
mcginniesstudy-results
took longer to say taboo words. taboo words gave bigger change in GSR.
mcginniesstudy-conclusion
emotion affects perceptual set, in this case perceptual defence
how does motivation affect perception
wanting something increases its attractiveness
whose study shows that motivation affects perception
gilchrist and nesburg
gilchrist and nesburgsstudy-aim
find out if food deprivation affects the perception of food
gilchrist and nesburgsstudy-method
hungry (no food for 20 hours) nd not hungry ptps shown a slide of a meal (steak, spag bol, burger, fried chicken). had to adjust light to level of slide shown.
gilchrist and nesburgs study- results
perceived food as brighter, the longer deprived of food
gilchrist and nesburgsstudy-conclusion
sensitivitygreater when food deprived.hunger is a motivating factor that affects the perception of food.
how does expectation affect perception
beliefs based on past experiences can affect how much we attend to things
whose study shows that expectation affects perception
bruner and minturn
bruner and minturnsstudy-aim
find out if an ambiguous figure is seen differently if the context is changed
bruner and minturnsstudy-method
ptps shown a sequence of letters or numbers with an ambiguous figure in the middle.
bruner and minturnsstudy-results
those who saw letters said B. those who saw numbers said 13.
bruner and minturnsstudy-conclusion
shows expectation is affected by the context the figure is presented
what are the 3 evaluation points of hudsons study (culture)
-cross cultural research
-problems with method
-poor design
what are 3 evaluation points of mcginnies study (emotion)
+objective measurement
-embarrasment not defence
-results are contradictory
what are 3 evaluation points of gilchrist and nesburgs study (motivation)
+support from similar studies
-ethical issues
-not like everyday life
what are 3 evaluation points of bruner and minturns study (expectation)
-artificial task
-independant groupd design
+real world application
hudsonevaluation-cross cultural research (-)
P-cross cultural research
E-language differences could've made method used unclear
C-validity is affected
hudson evaluation-problems with the method (-)
P-problems with the method
E-way the pictures were represented on paper may have confused ptps
C-affects findings
hudsonevaluation-poor design (-)
P-poor design
E-early cross cultural studies were poorly designed(no control groups)
C-findings lack validity
mcginnieevaluation-objective measurment (+)
objective measurment.
GSR is a scientific method to measureemotion.
better than rating scales.
mcginnieevaluation-embarrasment not defence (-)
embarrasment not defence.
delayed recognition may just be embarrasment, not perceptual defence.
there is no way of knowing what it is, results arent accurate.
mcginnieevaluation-results are contradictory (-)
results are contradictory.
difficult to draw conclusions from results that are inconsistent.
gilchrist and nesburgevaluation-support from similar studies (+)
support from similar studies.
sanford's study found similar results.
strengthens the validity of the conclusions.
gilchrist and nesburgevaluation-ethical issues (-)
ethical issues.
deprivation of food causes discomfort.
a case of physical harm.
gilchrist and nesburgevaluation-not like everyday life (-)
not like everyday life.
ptps judged pictures not real food.
may not apply to real world.
bruner and minturnevaluation-artificial task (-)
artificial task.
ambiguous figures are designed to trickperception.
task lacks validity.
bruner and minturnevaluation-independant groups design (-)
independant groups design.
ptp variables may have caused the difference in results, not expectation.