Chapter 3. Visual Perception - 2.0
Chapter 3. Visual Perception - 2.0
Outline:
• Some Basic Concepts of Perception
• How Does Our Visual System Work?
• Pathways to Perceive the What and the Where
• Approaches to Perception: Bottom-Up Theories and
Top-Down Theories
• Perception of Objects and Forms: Viewer-centered vs
Object-centered Perception
• Depth Perception
• We do not perceive the world exactly as
our eyes see it. Instead, our brain actively
tries to make sense of the many stimuli
that enter our eyes and fall on our retina.
• The brain processes the visual stimuli,
giving the stimuli meaning and interpreting
them.
Perceptual continuum
Optical Illusion
• So sometimes we perceive what is not there.
Other times, we do not perceive what is there.
And at still other times, we perceive what cannot
be there.
• The existence of perceptual illusions suggests
that what we sense in our sensory organs is not
necessarily what we perceive in our minds.
• The way we represent objects will depend in part
on our viewpoint in perceiving the objects.
Vision
Structures of the Human Eye
• Cornea
– Clear outer membrane that bends light to
focus it in the eye.
• Pupil
– The hole in the iris through which light passes.
• Lens
– The structure that focuses light on the retina.
Optic Nerve
• Pathway that
carries visual
information
from the
eyeball to the
brain.
– Illusion in which
the perceived
length of a line
is altered by the
position of other
lines that
enclose it