<big><big>Feeling sick&tired of things isnât in the wik page, so that mention is valuable here. And FATIGUE of various kinds, which youâd think I would remember, right?</big> ;-) <big>and the sensations of weakness and ENERGY/power/vitality.</big></big>
<big>Types of Perception
But really when we say touch we mean everything skin can register. So, not only shape and texture clear down to as fine as the motion of almost motionless air, but also temperature ⊠and pressure⊠and some other stuff â see also âOther Sensesâ a few paragraphs down.
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<big><big>I think Iâm not seeing the feelings of sympathy and empathy and kindness impulses in the text or various diagrams, either, so this is a good spot to include them as well. Also âtranspathyâ or emotional contagion, a state introduced in a group, "automatic and without understanding", by someoneâs emotional display; and âUnipathyâ - genuine emotional identification with another, an "intensified" and "involuntary" form of transpathy, which may present as a folie Ă deux.[2]â</big></big>
AND ALSO
<big>2.6 Social/Social perception, which allows people to understand the individuals</big> and groups of their social world. Thus, it is an element of social cognition.[33]
â 2.6.1 Speech â ...Listeners manage to perceive words across a wide range of conditions [including other words that surround a particular one], and the tempo of the speech, as well as the physical characteristics, accent, tone, and mood of the speaker. Reverberation, signifying the persistence of sound after the sound is produced, can also have a considerable impact on perception. Experiments have shown that people automatically compensate for this effect when hearing speech....[18][34]
â 2.6.2 Faces ...including recognizing the identity of an individual, and <big>facial expressions such as emotional cues</big>âŠ
â 2.6.3 Social touch ...[Main article: Somatosensory system § Neural processing of social touch] The somatosensory cortex is a part of the brain that receives and encodes sensory information from receptors of the entire body.[37] Affective touch is a type of sensory information that elicits an emotional reaction and is usually social in nature. <big>Such information is actually coded differently than other sensory information!!...</big>
<big><big>Although HUNGER, thirst, other desires, longing, yearning, missing, etc., oddly enough donât seem to be included as feels in the wik article. Nor in the see-alsos. So, SEE ALSO hunger & satiety and Thirst oh, and 16 BASIC DESIRES theory:</big>
Acceptance, the need for approval
Curiosity, the need to learn
Eating, the need for food
Family, the need to raise children
Honor, the need to be loyal to the traditional values of one's clan/ethnic group
Idealism, the need for social justice
Independence, the need for individuality
Order, the need for organized, stable, predictable environments
Physical activity, the need for exercise
Power, the need for influence of will
Romance, the need for sex and for beauty
Saving, the need to collect
Social contact, the need for friends (peer relationships)
Social status, the need for social standing/importance
Tranquility, the need to be safe
Vengeance, the need to strike back and to compete</big>
âź 2.7 Multi-Modal Perception
â 2.7.1 Time (Chronoception)
â 2.7.2 Agency â Sense of agency refers to the subjective feeling of having chosen a particular action. Conditions such as schizophrenia can cause a loss of this sense. leading to delusions, e.g. feeling like a machine or like an outside source is controlling self. At the opposite extreme, experiencing everything in the environment as though oneself decided it would happen.[43] Even in non-pathological cases, there is a time-gap between making a decision and the feeling of agency ⊠œ second or more can be measured from the instant of detectable neurological signs of a decision made to the point the subject is conscious of it. [Sounds backwards but seems to be saying even a decision can be a spontaneous reaction. Iâve seen other work on this that concludes that a lot of what seems to be memory of how come we did something is actually just trying to reconstruct to make sense of it afterward.]
â 2.7.3 Familiarity/ Recognition memory, sometimes divided by neuroscientists into familiarity and recollection.[46] A strong sense of familiarity can occur with no recollection, e.g., deja vu. The perirhinal cortex of the temporal lobe responds differently to stimuli that feel novel vs stimuli that feel familiar. Firing rates in the perirhinal cortex are connected with sense of familiarity in humans and other mammals. In tests, stimulating this area at 10â15 Hz made animals treat even novel images as familiar, and stimulation at 30â40 Hz made novel images to be partially treated as familiar, [47] leading test animals to look at a familiar image longer, as if for an unfamiliar one, but without the exploration behavior normal in novelty. [Because der lookinâ at teh novel familiar image goinâ, âI know you, donât I? Aw, câmon, I do, rite? Rite? Meh, nevermind.â]
â 2.7.4 Sexual stimulation, distinct from the general sense of touch, is strongly tied to hormonal activity and chemical triggers in the bodyâŠ.
â« <big>2.8 Other senses</big>
...body balance, acceleration, gravity, position of body parts [the work of the vestibular system], temperature, and pain besides what the skin can sense, PLUS other sensations internally, such as suffocation, gag reflex, and (pressure sensations besides on the skin) abdominal distension, fullness of rectum and urinary bladder, and other sensations in the throat and lungs and other viscera...<big>
AND
- 7 Effects on Perception
- 7.1 Effect of Experience â Main article: Perceptual learning â With experience, organisms can learn to make finer perceptual distinctions, and learn new kinds of categorization⊠Past actions and events that transpire right before an encounter or any form of stimulation have a strong degree of influence on how sensory stimuli are processed and perceived⊠For example, when engaging in conversation, we attempt to understand their message and words by not only paying attention to what we hear through our ears but also from the previous shapes we have seen our mouths make. Another example would be if we had a similar topic come up in another conversation, we would use our previous knowledge to guess the direction the conversation is headed in. DIALOGUE!âŠ
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- <big>7.2 Effect of motivation and expectation</big> âMain article: Set (psychology) â A perceptual set, also called perceptual expectancy or just set is a predisposition to perceive things in a certain way.[85] It is an example of how perception can be shaped by "top-down" processes such as drives and expectations.[86] Perceptual sets occur in all the different senses.[56] They can be long term, such as a special sensitivity to hearing one's own name in a crowded room, or short term, as in the ease with which hungry people notice the smell of food.[87] A simple demonstration of the effect involved very brief presentations of non-words such as "sael". Subjects who were told to expect words about animals read it as "seal", but others who were expecting boat-related words read it as "sail".[87] Sets can be created by motivation and so can result in people interpreting ambiguous figures so that they see what they want to seeâŠ.
- 8 See also</big>
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