Visual perception and visual perception processes Although both visual perception and visual perception are interactive processes, there are major differences between the two processes. The stimulating visual sense of a sensory organ is a physiological process, which means that everyone is the same. We absorb energy such as electromagnetic energy (light) and sound waves through sensory organs such as eyes. This energy is converted to electrochemical energy by cone of retina and rod cell (receptor cell).
This article clearly shows the difference between sight and vision. This is done by showing that visual perception is a physiological process and visual perception is a psychological process. It explicitly explains some principles of vision and explains how they function in a way that we perceive things. I will explain the influence of psychological factors on our perception and how these factors affect the possibility that our perception system will not function. Related empirical studies are included to confirm the information provided
Both visual perception and visual perception are interactive processes, but there are major differences between the two processes. The stimulating visual sense of a sensory organ is a physiological process, which means that everyone is the same. We absorb energy such as electromagnetic energy (light) and sound waves through sensory organs such as eyes. This energy is converted to electrochemical energy by cone of retina and rod cell (receptor cell). There are four main stages in feeling. Sensation may include detecting a stimulus from the surrounding world, recording a stimulus through the recipient cell, converting or changing the stimulation energy to an electrical nerve impulse, and finally transferring the electrical impulse to the brain including. Then our brain will notice what the information is. Therefore perception is defined as selection, composition, interpretation of sensory input.
Even if two processes form a sequence, visual perception is different from visual perception. Our brain draws meaning from what we see through perceptual and perceptual processes (Grivas Down & Carter pg 77). These two systems interact, but their uses are different. Emotion is a physiological process that includes "receiving and converting information, spreading to the brain". (Coon pg 120). An example of a certain size is when you fly by plane. Looking out the window and looking at the lower world, if you want to see the house, it looks like the size of a small dot. I know that the house is not shrinking by a certain size principle. Therefore, my brain uses past experience to help accurately perceive the house. Empirical research shows that a certain scale will be learned