Paper 1 - AQA Psychology

Cards (216)

  • Perception
    How we interpret or make sense of the sensory information that we receive
  • Perception
    • Various explanations and theories for how perception actually works including how culture can affect perception
  • Visual perception
    • Seeing the outline of a dalmatian walking in a collection of dots and blobs
  • Bottom-up process
    Perception is based solely on the information received by our eyes
  • Top-down process
    Our mind generates expectations of what we are looking at, and it is these expectations that then help us make sense of the information our eyes receive
  • Gibson's direct theory of perception
    • The real world presents sufficient information for direct perception without inference
    • Role of motion parallax in everyday perception
  • Sensation
    Information we receive through the senses
  • Transduction
    The process of converting sensory information into electrical signals
  • Our bodies are bombarded with lots of information, far more than we can actually cope with if we were to give it all attention
  • Perception
    The process of interpreting and making sense of all the information we receive
  • Monocular depth cues

    • Height in plane
    • Relative size
    • Occlusion
    • Linear perspective
  • Binocular depth cues

    • Retinal disparity
    • Convergence
  • Motion parallax
    The way in which our visual field changes with movement, with close objects seeming to move more than objects which are far away
  • Gibson argued the real world was three-dimensional and where we stand and move about within it is as much a part of real-world perception as shape and colour
  • Affordances
    The possibilities for actions which the environment offers
  • Gibson's theory proposes that sensation and perception are the same processes
  • Visual illusions demonstrate that perception involves making inferences about what we see when the image is ambiguous, undermining Gibson's theory
  • Reasons for visual illusions
    • Ambiguity
    • Misinterpreted depth cues
    • Fiction
    • Size constancy
  • Size constancy
    Keeping the original perception of the size of an object even when information received by the eyes changes
  • Perceptual constancy
    Perceiving objects as being the same (constant) even when the visual image we receive is different
  • Fiction
    Creating something that isn't really there in order to complete the image
  • Perceptual system
    • Generates an image that fills the gap to create something plausible for us
  • Shape constancy
    • Looking at a cup from different angles, the shapes we receive on the retina are very different but we still see the same shape
  • Size constancy
    • People who are in the distance appear smaller, but as they approach we do not see them growing larger
  • Gregory's constructivist theory of perception

    Perception uses inferences from visual cues and past experience to construct a model of reality
  • Gregory proposed that perception worked by making reasonable guesses about what we are seeing based on what it is most likely to be</b>
  • Gregory believed perception involved cognitive processes and that we do not simply perceive information that we receive
  • Gregory believed we rely on stored knowledge and experiences which affects our perception
  • Gilchrist and Nesberg (1952)

    • Found that hunger affected how people perceived images of food
  • Not everyone agrees with the explanations given for illusions such as the Muller-Lyer illusion
  • The Muller-Lyer illusion still works when the arrowheads are replaced with circles
  • Perceptual set
    A state of readiness for the information we receive from the environment around us
  • We need to be able to select what we are going to focus our attention on and what we are going to ignore
  • All our cognitive processes such as memory, decision-making, learning and perception can all be affected by the perceptual set
  • Memory
    • We remember different things dependent on our mood
  • Decision-making
    • Affected by what we have just seen or what we are expecting
  • Learning
    • Babies learn nursery rhymes more easily than normal sentences or letters
  • When we expect something, we are more likely to notice it
  • Bruner and Minturn's study on expectation provides research support for this
  • Children in western societies are raised accustomed to line drawings and cartoons, while children from traditional tribal societies draw animals as if they were flat and spread across