The Carnegie Pulseabout the carnegie pulse | advertise | contact | subscriptions | join 
newsart & cultureopinionseventscourse schedule

My schedule
Most popular
View departments
View locations
View times

Find course by title:




 

05-814 Perception


Units:9.0
Department:Human Comp. Interaction
Prerequisites:85-102 or 85-211
Cross-listed:85-370 , 85-770
Notes:THE DATE AND TIME OF THIS COURSE IS INCORRECT. THIS COURSE WIL. BE OFFERED ON TUES/THURS FROM 9-10:20 BY ROBERTA KLATSKY. PLEAS. CONTACT AMBER VIVIS AT ALBROWN@ANDREW.CMU.EDU FOR ANY QUESTIONS.
Related URLs:http://www.hcii.cs.cmu.edu

Perception, broadly defined, is the construction of a representation of the external world, for purposes of thinking about it and acting in it. Although we often think of perception as the processing of inputs to the sense organs, the world conveyed by the senses is ambiguous, and cognitive and sensory systems interact to interpret it. In this course, we will examine the sensory-level mechanisms involved in perception by various sensory modalities, including vision, audition, and touch. We will learn how sensory coding interacts with top-down processing based on context and prior knowledge and how perception changes with learning and development. The goals include not only imparting basic knowledge about perception, but fostering an appreciation for the beauty of perceptual systems and providing some new insights into everyday experiences.

  Popularity index
Rank for this semester:#0
Rank in this department:#0

  Students also scheduled
05-600 HCI Pro Seminar
05-610 Introduction to Human-Computer Inte...
05-601 HCI Seminar
51-761 Communication Design Fundamentals
05-813 Human Factors
05-631 Software Architecture for User Inte...
05-413 Human Factors
15-211 Fundamental Data Structures and Alg...
05-431 Software Architecture for User Inte...
15-398 Special Topic: Introduction to Nano...

  Spring 2005 times


No sections available for semester Spring 2005.



talkback to the pulse
No comments about this course have been posted, yet. Be the first to post!
Share your opinion on this course with other Pulse readers. Login below or register to begin posting.

Email address:
Password:







  (c) Copyright 2004 The Carnegie Pulse, Carnegie Mellon's first exclusively online student-run news source. campus mirror | RSS