General Psychology Questions and Answers For Chapter 3
General Psychology Questions and Answers For Chapter 3
General Psychology Questions and Answers For Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Sensory Processes and Perception
Sensations
1. What is sensation?
Sensation is the process by which our senses gather information and send it to the brain
2. What is the first link in the chain for every sensory system?
It is a cell called sensory receptors
3. Where are sensory receptors housed? Give examples of these organs.
They are housed in sense organs such as ears, eyes and skin.
Sensory Adaption
7. The phenomenon of sensory adaption occurs in all senses except one. What is it?
Taste
Smell
Pain
25. What are the receptors that sense pain? Where can they be found?
They can be found in superficial portions of the skin, in joint capsules, within the periostea of the
bones, around the walls of blood vessels and in deep tissues of most visceral organs.
26. What are the two types of pain? Give examples
They are the quick and sharp pain and we experience it when we receive a cut and the dull and
throbbing pain and we experience it from a sore muscle or an injured back.
Hearing
32. Which organ is responsible for balance and detecting body position?
The human inner ears.
Sound Localization
Deafness
37. What is the difference between conduction deafness and nerve deafness?
We have conduction deafness when the transfer of vibrations from the eardrum to the inner ear is
weak. We have nerve deafness when we have damage to the hair cells or auditory nerve.
Vision
Perception
46. What is the difference between sensation and perception?
Sensation refers to the immediate unprocessed result of stimulation of sensory receptors in the
eyes, ears , nose , tongue or skin. Perception is the process by which organisms interpret and
organize sensation to produce a meaningful experience of the world. In other words, sensation s
enable our bodies to receive information from the environment and perception enables us to make
sense of this information.
47. What is the advantage of selective attention ?
It allows us to maximize information gained from the object of our focus while reducing sensory
interference from other irrelevant sources.
48. Why can’t sensation and perception be separated?
Because they are a part of one continuous process. Sensations receive information and perception
makes sense of it.
Characteristics of Perception
49. Perception is a complex mental process. Various acts are involved in the process of perception.
Give example.
A child sees a fruit, touches it, smells it, tastes it and then combines the different sensations into a
meaningful pattern and perceives the fruit to be a mango.
50. Perception is influenced by past experience. Although perception governed by sense-organs, it is
influenced by past experience. Give example.
Two apples are given to you to eat. If you had tested green apples and you had a bitter experience
about it, you will choose the red one.
51. Perception is something accompanied by feelings. Give example
We experience a flower and feel pleasure. We perceive noise and feel dissatisfied.
52. Perception is accompanied by an action and sometimes followed by action. Give examples.
We climb an hill and perceive its steepness through our muscular actions. Perception here is
accompanied by action. A bell is rung in a college and the students leave their seats. The perception
here is followed by and action.
53. Perception is determined by a set. What is a set? Give example.
A set refers to one’s physical or mental readiness. For example, a doctor hears the sound of a
telephone while asleep because he is set to hear the telephone. But his wife may not be able to
hear it as she is not set to hear it.
54. Perception requires attention. We first perceive the object and then we attend to it. True/False
55. Perception is determined by habitual set due to past training. Give examples.
A chemist perceives much more in common objects which are chemical substances. An astronomer
perceives much more in the sky than a common man can perceive.
56. Perceptual is determined by a context. Give example.
The same man is perceived taller by the side of a dwarf, and shorter by the side of a very tall man.
57. Perception is a single unitary experience. What does that mean? Give example.
We perceive an object as a whole and not part by part. For example, we perceive a chair as a chair
not as an aggregate of the seat, the legs, the arms and back.
58. We perceive an object as a figure in ground. Give examples.
We perceive the moon in the sky. The moon is the figure and the sky is the ground. We perceive
words in a page. Words are figures and the page is the ground.
59. Perception is always selective. What does that mean?
We perceive a large number of sensory information. But we do not attend to all this information.
We select one at a time, attend to it and perceive it due to various conditions.
60. Perception is subjective. What does that mean?
Our perception of objects, situations or people is subjective in nature. Our perception is influenced
by our motives, needs, set, or attitudes. Since these subjective factors vary from a person to
another, the same object may be perceived differently by different persons.
61. Perception is an organizing activity. What does that mean?
The process of combining, grouping, and organizing the various properties or elements of stimuli
into a meaningful pattern is called perception.