| perception |
The acquisition and processing of sensory information in order to see, hear, taste, smell, or feel objects in the world; also guides an organism's actions with respect to those objects. Perception may involve conscious awareness of objects and events; this awareness is termed a percept.
Ãâó: highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0070579431/student_...
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| perception |
(hearing) - process of knowing or being aware of information through the ear.
Ãâó: www.luhs.org/health/topics/ent/glossary.htm
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| perception |
Raul Hernandez-Peon, a young Mexican psychologist, conducted an experiment to find out how the brain filters unwanted signals and prevents itself being overloaded by the senses.
Ãâó: www.embassy.org.nz/encycl/p3encyc.htm
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| perception |
means to understand or apprehend with the use of mind; it is the mental faculty of Recognition.
Ãâó: miriams-well.org/Glossary/
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| percept |
What the perceiver sees or hears as a result of stimulation, as opposed to the physical reality of the stimulation. The percept may be considered the "object" of study in perceptual psychology. [1]
Ãâó: www.keithyates.com/glossary.htm
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| percept | of or relating to perception |
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| percept | in a perceptive manner |
| percept | the quality of insight and sympathetic understanding |
| percept | perception of that which is obscure |
| percept | delicate discrimination (especially of aesthetic values) |
| percept | a feeling of understanding |
| percept | a feeling of understanding |
| percept | of or relating to the act of perceiving |
| percept | the representation of what is perceived |
| percept | with regard to perception |
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