Chatra Khatiwada
Assignment: Physiological Influences on Perception
Date: 0715/2017
An evening out with friends in a crowded restaurant
I am always nervous to go inside a restaurant when people are sitting in a mass. If my eyesight are worse in that situation and all my friends are around, I will seek help to reserve a table which is far away from rest of the people. In a situation if I have hearing loss and I am with my friends at the restaurant, I will select my very close friends to sit nearby. My physiological influences on my observation in this situation would be in need of more help from others.
In a situation if I am different in a height and I am with my friends in a restaurant, I cannot think of any difference in my observation. If someone is shorter or taller by some certain inches, I am don’t even recognize the difference. I think my psychological thinking on peoples’ heights have no effects in my surroundings. My physiological influences on my observation in this situation would be not thought-provoking. But it can also give me same reaction while going to a restaurants with my kids, so I think it is more towards effectiveness of the particular situation and its object.
Many people don’t prefer having sick friends around and neither do I prefer think, in situation like that, I will prefer not to go to a dinner with my friends at the restaurant while being sick. My perception on that is not to be around people and not to bother them being sick or having serious
Not necessarily, ill employees are not necessarily confined to their beds so if another employee sees them out shopping, walking the dog or sitting in a pub it’s worth remembering that not all illnesses incapacitate a person to the extent that they need to stay in bed or remain at home. This is especially true with conditions such as stress or depression. Colleagues are often keen to alert their managers to any perceived inconsistencies between a colleague’s absence and their behaviour whilst of sick, particularly if their own work load has increased as a result.
My Baseball academy was very supportive and received I many get-well-soon cards that helped gain my confidence and lighten my mood. Also my teachers were very supportive of my recovery, allowing me to do school work at home when I was sick and being flexible on test dates so I could do them when I was healthy again. Having a group of supportive people around taught me that I should not get depressed about being sick. I learned that I must be positive and fight in order to recover. I also learned that your true friends are the ones who help you through the hardest times. Being sick allowed me to see the good in people when all they wanted to do was help. The friends that stayed with me during my sickness are still my closest friends to this day and I have a much greater appreciation for having them as friends
Sound waves: Changes in pressure caused by molecules of air or fluid colliding and moving apart again.
Change blindness is a phenomenon in attention where drastic changes to a scene can go unnoticed. This is important to the field of Human Sensation and Perception because it helps illustrate how a visual scene is processed. Specifically it shows how even if there is direct attention to a scene, there are times when drastic changes can occur without perception of the change occurring. With extensive research already conducted illustrating this effect, new research has recently been conducted studying different types of scene changes in the hopes of understanding which changes are easier or harder to notice. The results of these studies were quantified by the measurement of change detection time (usually reported in seconds). This subset of change blindness research has far-reaching practical applications, especially in the field of security and law enforcement. By applying the knowledge of which type of stimuli lead to longer change detection times training programs could be developed that allow this population to improve their observation skills.
Identify behavioral changes that result from the presence of others. Why does the presence of others produce changes in our level of performance or awareness?
Generally individuals do not like to be around people who tend to be sick or ill due to contagious reasons. Another reason is that individuals typically know that the person they are communicating with tend to be grumpier than they usually are. The last reason happens to be that people are more likely to be emotionally hurt when they are around an ill human. Since they were looked down on it was hard for them to be accepted by the society they are living
Being chronically sick is like being on a roller coaster. When you first get sick everybody's there but once they realize that the ride never ends. They wait until it gets back to the easier part of the ride and they jump off. Some stay by your side helping you when it gets to top knowing that you're afraid of heights but after a while they expect you to get used to it. What they don't know you will never get used to
Studies published in Chemosensory Perception show individuals with psychopathic traits may also have a weak sense of smell. The article ‘Psychopaths’ Have An Impaired Sense Of Smell, Study Suggests, which was published in Science Daily, has studies done by Mehmet Mahmut and Richard Stevenson in Australia. Previous research shows that the area of the brain dealing with empathy, something psychopaths do not use, and the olfactory sense are relatively near each other in the frontal cortex. The scientists took 70 non-criminal adults who volunteered for the study and began with assessing each participant’s accuracy and sensitivity to smell. Afterwards, they measured the individuals’ psychopathy levels. They did this by asking a series of questions
The reason being that social context, as well as body size of self and others, influences the individual observer’s estimation (Gagnon et al., 2015). The understanding based on the theory of affordances is that, in making judgment affordances for self, the individual observer uses the action capabilities of others to inform their action capabilities (Gagnon et al., 2015). However, the authors aim to determine whether the action capabilities of others really do influence an observer’s own perceived capabilities, and if observers will alter their perceived action capabilities based on the capabilities of another person, by assessing self and other judgment of affordances within the same participants. In addition, , the authors aim to replicate past findings that observers can accurately judge affordances for themselves and for other people using the affordance of passing through an aperture. In addition to answering their questions, they included in their study, variations in body size, of self and others, and in the scenarios between participants (Gagnon et al.,
Perception is defined as how you look at others and the world around you. Being able to select, organize and intercept information starts the perceptual process. Perception affects the way people communicate with others. An individual’s pattern of thinking can affect their perception of others. Most people communicate best with people of similar cultures.