ABSTRACT

The study of sensation and perception looks at how we acquire, process, and interpret information about the outside world. By describing key ideas from first principles, this straightforward introduction provides easy access to the basic concepts in the subject, and incorporates the most recent advances with useful historical background. The text takes a uniquely integrative approach, highlighting fundamental findings that apply across all the senses - including vision, hearing, touch, pain, balance, smell and taste - rather than considering each sense in isolation.

Several pedagogical features help students to engage with the material. ‘Key Term’ and ‘Key Concept’ boxes describe technical terms and concepts whilst ‘Question’ boxes relate the material to everyday questions about perception. Each chapter ends with suggestions for further reading, and the final chapter draws together the material from the previous chapters, summarizing the broad principles described, and outlining some major unresolved issues.

Assuming no prior knowledge, this book is an accessible and up-to-date overview of the processes of human sensation and perception. Presented in full color, it is an ideal introduction for pre-undergraduate and first year undergraduate students on courses in psychology, as well as neuroscience and biology.

chapter |19 pages

Sensory receptors

chapter |18 pages

Sensory pathways and cortical processing

chapter |15 pages

The senses and the brain

chapter |18 pages

Psychophysics

chapter |18 pages

Perception as information processing

chapter |17 pages

Population codes in perception

chapter |20 pages

Perceptual inference

chapter |16 pages

Multi-sensory processing

chapter |13 pages

Consciousness and perception

chapter |11 pages

Summary and future directions