Perception

What is perception? According to Britannica online perception “in humans, the process whereby sensory stimulation is translated into organized experience. That experience, or percept, is the joint product of the stimulation and of the process itself. Relations found between various types of stimulation (e.g., light waves and sound waves) and their associated percepts suggest inferences that can be made about the properties of the perceptual process; theories of perceiving then can be developed on the basis of these inferences. Because the perceptual process is not itself public or directly observable (except to the perceiver himself, whose percepts are given directly in experience), the validity of perceptual theories can be checked only indirectly. That is, predictions derived from theory are compared with appropriate empirical data, quite often through experimental research.” (Encyclopedia Britannica Online , 2008)
There are two main theories of perception: Active perception and Passive perception. Perception is more or less a theory and is the oldest study in psychology. Perception differs from one person to another. Not everyone perceives everything the same. Some people are picture thinkers and some are not. Like some people are Visual learners and some are not. So, individuals who are not picture thinkers may not perceive shape shifting as the world around him or her changes. Perception plays tricks on what humans see; it dilutes human’s reality and the truth. The human mind can only learn new information from things the mind already knows.
The way humans behave varies with each situation. Many businesses and corporations usually have ethics codes placed to encourage appropriate behavior. However everyone knows these codes are not as effective as the busine ...
Word (s) : 912
Pages (s) : 4
View (s) : 714
Rank : 0
   
Report this paper
Please login to view the full paper