Chapter 6 Introduction

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Sensation and Perception

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Mark J. Terrill/AP Photo

Basic Concepts of Sensation and Perception

Vision: Sensory and Perceptual Processing

The Nonvisual Senses

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I have perfect vision,” explains writer-teacher Heather Sellers. Her vision may be fine, but there is a problem with her perception. In her memoir, You Don’t Look Like Anyone I Know, Sellers (2010) tells of awkward moments resulting from her lifelong prosopagnosia—face blindness.

In college, on a date at the Spaghetti Station, I returned from the bathroom and plunked myself down in the wrong booth, facing the wrong man. I remained unaware he was not my date even as my date (a stranger to me) accosted Wrong Booth Guy, and then stormed out of the Station… . I do not recognize myself in photos or videos. I can’t recognize my stepsons in the soccer pick-up line; I failed to determine which husband was mine at a party, in the mall, at the market.

To avoid being perceived as snobby or aloof, Sellers sometimes fakes recognition. She often smiles at people she passes, in case she knows them. Or she pretends to know the person with whom she is talking. (Similarly, those of us with hearing loss may fake hearing or shy away from busy social situations.) But, Sellers points out, there is an upside: When encountering someone who previously irritated her, she typically feels no ill will, because she doesn’t recognize the person.

Unlike Sellers, most of us have a functioning area on the underside of our brain’s right hemisphere that helps us recognize a familiar human face as soon as we detect it—in only one-seventh of a second (Jacques & Rossion, 2006; Rossion & Boermanse, 2011). This remarkable ability illustrates a broader principle. Nature’s sensory gifts enable each animal to obtain essential information. Some examples:

In this chapter, we’ll look more closely at what psychologists have learned about how we sense and perceive our world. We begin with some basic principles that apply to all our senses.