Abstract
Perceptions may be compared with hypotheses in science. The methods of acquiring scientific knowledge provide a working paradigm for investigating processes of perception. Much as the information channels of instruments, such as radio telescopes, transmit signals which are processed according to various assumptions to give useful data, so neural signals are processed to give data for perception. To understand perception, the signal codes and the stored knowledge or assumptions used for deriving perceptual hypotheses must be discovered. Systematic perceptual errors are important clues for appreciating signal channel limitations, and for discovering hypothesis-generating procedures. Although this distinction between ‘physiological’ and ‘cognitive’ aspects of perception may be logically clear, it is in practice surprisingly difficult to establish which are responsible even for clearly established phenomena such as the classical distortion illusions. Experimental results are presented, aimed at distinguishing between and discovering what happens when there is mismatch with the neural signal channel, and when neural signals are processed inappropriately for the current situation. This leads us to make some distinctions between perceptual and scientific hypotheses, which raise in a new form the problem: What are ‘objects’?
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Neural Correlates of Auditory–Visual Stimulus Onset Asynchrony Detection
Intersensory temporal synchrony is an ubiquitous sensory attribute that has proven to be critical for binding multisensory inputs, sometimes erroneously leading to dramatic perc...
Conceptual Processing during the Conscious Resting State: A Functional MRI Study
Abstract Localized, task-induced decreases in cerebral blood flow are a frequent finding in functional brain imaging research but remain poorly understood. One account of these ...
A Model for the Perception of Morse Code-Like Signals
A model for the perception of some Morse Code-like signals is developed, tested, and generalized. In the development certain formal relations among the signals provide the bases...
Perceptual symbol systems
Prior to the twentieth century, theories of knowledge were inherently perceptual. Since then, developments in logic, statistics, and programming languages have inspired amodal t...
Simultaneously Uncovering the Patterns of Brain Regions Involved in Different Story Reading Subprocesses
Story understanding involves many perceptual and cognitive subprocesses, from perceiving individual words, to parsing sentences, to understanding the relationships among the sto...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1980
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 290
- Issue
- 1038
- Pages
- 181-197
- Citations
- 772
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1098/rstb.1980.0090