- Perception is deceptively hard
- Perception’s job is to take in input through receptors and determine what is out there in the world
- We perceive things effortlessly but if one were to attempt to reproduce what we do it is extremely complex
- 50-60% of the brain is devoted to seeing
- Eyes just measure light
- Perceptual problems are usually ill-posed
- ill-posed
- not enough info to determine answer
- Example
- World is 3D
- We perceive it’s 3D structure correctly
- But the input is 2D
- Perception is (unconscious) inference
- Information in sensory input does not uniquely specify structure of the world
- Brain has to make it’s best guess
- “Illusions” illustrate perceptual mechanisms at work and can help us study them
- Illusions tell us where the system breaks down which tells us where our brain takes short cuts
- Quantitative Methods in Perception
- Our eye can detect a minimum of one photon (although it takes 7 to get that one photon to the eye)
- A Detection Experiment
- determine whether or not an ‘X’ is present
- Different Sources of Noise
- Internal noise
- External noise
Friday, February 3, 2012
370: Introduction
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