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Summary Sensation and Perception 7th (NOT 6th) Jeremy M. Wolfe - chapters 1 - 15 + 76 test questions + 55 important core concepts $7.61
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Summary Sensation and Perception 7th (NOT 6th) Jeremy M. Wolfe - chapters 1 - 15 + 76 test questions + 55 important core concepts

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This is the 7th edition of Sensation and Perception by Wolfe. I couldn't add the right 2024 version as it's not yet available on Stuvia. Chapters 1-15 are summarized in a logical, pleasant to read fashion. I've added common test bank questions with answers separately and core concepts you must know.

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  • This is the 7th edition!! its not yet available on this site apparently
  • January 12, 2025
  • January 12, 2025
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Summary
Chapters 1 - 15

Sensation and Perception - 7th Edition
Jeremy M. Wolfe
0197663818

For: Maastricht University 2025

+ 76 test questions with answers
+ 55 important core concepts explained

,
,Chapter 1: Introduction

Sensation and perception

- Sensation: the ability to detect a stimulus and, perhaps, to turn that detection into a
private experience
- Perception: the act of giving meaning to a detected sensation
- Condillac: mental life relies on information from our senses

Methods used in the study of the senses

- Thresholds
- Scaling: measuring private experience
o Quale: in philosophy, a private conscious experience of sensation or perception
- Signal detection theory – measuring difficult decisions
- Sensory neuroscience
- Neuroimaging – an image of the mind

Thresholds and the dawn of psychophysics

- Dualism: the idea that the mind has an existence separate from the material world of
the body
- Materialism: the idea that the only thing that exists is matter, and that all things,
including the mind and consciousness, are the results of interactions between bits of
matter
- Panpsychism: the idea that the mind exist as a property of all matter, that is, that all
matter has consciousness (Fechner)
- Psychophysics: the science of defining quantitative relationships between physical
and psychological (subjective) events (Fechner)
- Two-point touch threshold: the minimum distance at which two stimuli are just
perceptible as separate (Weber)
- Just noticeable difference/ difference threshold: the smallest detectable difference
between two stimuli, or the minimum change in a stimulus that enables it to be correctly
judged as different from a reference stimulus (Weber)
- Weber’s law: the principle describing the relationship between stimulus and resulting
sensation that says the JND is a constant fraction of the comparison stimulus (e.g. 1:100
for length, 1:40 for weight)
o Clear objective measurement, we know how much the stimulus varied and
the observer can either tell that it changed or not
- Fechner’s law: a principle describing the relationship between stimulus and resulting
sensation that says the magnitude of subjective sensation(S) increases proportionally to
the logarithm of the stimulus intensity(R) (S = k log R)
o Describes the relationship between mind and matter
o The smallest detectable change in a stimulus can be considered as a unit of the
mind, because this is the smallest bit of change that is perceived
o Assumes that all JNDs are perceptually equivalent, which turns out to be incorrect
- Absolute threshold: the min amount of a stimulation necessary for a person to detect
a stimulus 50% of the time

, o Detected 50% of the time due to the variability in the nervous system, stimuli near
the threshold will be detected sometimes and missed other times  there is no
hard boundary

Psychophysical methods

- Method of constant stimuli: a psychophysical method in which many stimuli ranging from
rarely to almost always perceivable, are presented one at a time and participants respond
to each presentation: yes/no or same/different
- Method of limits: a psychophysical method in which the particular dimension of a stimulus,
or the difference between two stimuli, is varied incrementally until the participant
responds differently
o Tones are presented in increasing or decreasing intensity; increasing: report
when you first hear the tone; decreasing: report when the tone is no longer
heard. The threshold is set at the average of the crossover points
- Method of adjustment: a method of limits in which the participant controls the change in
the stimulus

Scaling methods and supertasters

- Magnitude estimation: a psychophysical method in which the participant assigns
values according to perceived magnitudes of the stimuli
o Steven’s power law: a principle describing the relationship between stimulus and
resulting sensation that says the magnitude of subjective sensation(S) is
proportional to the stimulus magnitude(I) raised to an exponent(b) ( S = aIb )
 Measures subjective ratings, and we can check whether these are
reasonable and consistent but there is no way of knowing whether they are
objectively right or wrong
- Cross-modality matching: the ability to match the intensities of sensations that come
from different sensory modalities. This ability enables insight into sensory differences.
For example, a listener might adjust the brightness of a light until it matches the
loudness of a tone, the relationship between modalities appears to be similar across
individuals

Signal detection theory

- Signal detection theory: a psychophysical theory that quantifies the response of an
observer to the presentation of a signal in the presence of noise (internal noise, the static
in your nervous system). Measures obtained from a series of presentations are sensitivity
(d’) and criterion of the observer
o Criterion: an internal threshold set by the observer. If the internal response is
above the criterion, the observer gives one response (yes) and below the criterion
the observer gives another response (no)
 Correct rejection, hit, false alarm, miss
o Sensitivity: a value that defines the ease with which an observer can tell the
difference between the presence and absence of a stimulus or the
difference between stimulus 1 and stimulus 2 (d’ or d-prime)

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