A-Z Popular New Thinking Search »
Human Experience
 
Common Problems

Related Topics
Emotional States

Happiness

Human Beings

Human Nature

Life Lessons

Life Problems

19 Examples of Perception

 , updated on
Perception is cognition that processes sensory information. This is an individual's link to both the external world and their own body. The following are illustrative examples of perception.

Vision

The ability to see including color perception.

Hearing

The ability to hear sound. Most humans can hear sound between 20 Hz and 20,000 Hz.

Touch

The ability to sense the physical world though physical contact with it.

Haptic Perception

The combination of touch + time whereby humans can understand the movement of things they are touching. For example, the ability to perceive the shaking of an aircraft in turbulence.

Taste

The ability to sense the composition of a substance with the mouth, particularly food and beverages.

Smell

The ability to sense the composition of the air with the nose. This greatly influences taste and appears to play a role in memory.

Time

The ability to sense the passage of time and to estimate how much time has passed between events.

Self

The sense that you exist and a general awareness of your body and mind.

Agency

The sense that you are in control of your body and mind and that you have some limited ability to influence the external world.

Body Position

Awareness of the position of parts of the body. For example, awareness of where your legs are at a point in time as you run. This relies on senses known as the somatosensory system.

Gravity

Awareness of the weight of the body and the effects of gravity. This relies on senses known as the vestibular system which is part of the inner ear.

Speed, Acceleration & Direction

Awareness of the speed and acceleration of the body. For example, an individual on an uncontrolled snowboard who can sense a significant rate of acceleration. Also relies on the vestibular system.

Balance & Motion

Perception of the stability of the body as it moves through space and time. This relies on multiple senses such as vision, somatosensory and vestibular systems.

Temperature

The ability to sense the temperature of parts of your body and things that you touch. Relies on the somatosensory system.

Internal Senses

The ability to sense your organs. For example, the ability to sense that you are in need of oxygen and must breath or that you need to go to the bathroom.

Pain

An unpleasant sense provided by the central nervous system that signals problems with the body.

Intuition

The ability to sense knowledge that doesn't originate with the conscious mind. The ancient Greeks including Plato and Socrates viewed this as a connection to some type of universal presence. Modern science tends to view intuition as the product of unconscious thought, although this isn't currently well understood.

Salience

Salience is the ability to automatically perceive what might be important in a sea of sensory information. For example, a bicyclist who picks up the sound of a car behind them from a great deal of city noise.

Social Perception

The ability to sense social information independently of conscious thought. For example, the ability to intuitively sense emotions possibly using cues such as body language and facial expressions.

Overview

Perception is the ability to make sense of the world by detecting and interpreting information. This includes the mechanisms that detect raw information such as eyes that detect light and color. Perception is also a cognitive process that converts this raw information into meaning, often in real time.

Summary

Perception is the ability to sense information including low level things such as sound and high level things such as voices or the mood of a room.
Definitions: Perception
Type
Definition (1)
Cognition that processes sensory information.
Definition (2)
Awareness of the self and the external world.
Related Concepts
Next: Social Perception

Thinking

This is the complete list of articles we have written about thinking.
Abductive Reasoning
Abstract Thinking
Abstraction
Aesthetics
Analogy
Analysis Paralysis
Analytical Thinking
Anomie
Argument
Argument From Silence
Arrow Of Time
Assertions
Automaticity
Backward Induction
Base Rate Fallacy
Benefit Of Doubt
Big Picture
Brainstorming
Call To Action
Catch 22
Causality
Choice Architecture
Circular Reasoning
Cognition
Cognitive Abilities
Cognitive Biases
Cold Logic
Collective Intelligence
Complexity Bias
Concept
Consciousness
Constructive Criticism
Convergent Thinking
Counterfactual Thinking
Creative Tension
Creeping Normality
Critical Thinking
Culture
Curse Of Knowledge
Decision Fatigue
Decision Framing
Decision Making
Defensive Pessimism
Design Thinking
Divergent Thinking
Educated Guess
Emotional Intelligence
Epic Meaning
Essential Complexity
Excluded Middle
Failure Of Imagination
Fallacies
Fallacy Fallacy
False Analogy
False Balance
False Dichotomy
False Equivalence
First Principles
Formal Logic
Four Causes
Fuzzy Logic
Gambler's Fallacy
Generalization
Golden Hammer
Good Judgement
Grey Area
Groupthink
Heuristics
Hindsight Bias
Hope
Idealism
Ideas
If-By-Whiskey
Illogical Success
Imagination
Independent Thinking
Inductive Reasoning
Inference
Influencing
Informal Logic
Information
Information Cascade
Introspection
Intuition
Inventive Step
Learning
Lifestyle
Logic
Logical Argument
Logical Thinking
Ludic Fallacy
Magical Thinking
Meaning
Mental Experiences
Mental State
Mindset
Misuse of Statistics
Motivated Reasoning
Natural Language
Nirvana Fallacy
Norms
Not Even Wrong
Objective Reason
Objectivity
Opinion
Overthinking
Perception
Personal Values
Perspective
Positive Thinking
Practical Thinking
Pragmatism
Premise
Problem Solving
Proof By Example
Propositional Logic
Prosecutor's Fallacy
Radical Chic
Rational Thought
Realism
Reality
Reason
Reasoning
Red Herring
Reflective Thinking
Reification
Relativism
Salience
Scarcity Mindset
Scientism
Selective Attention
Serendipity
Situational Awareness
Sour Grapes
State Of Mind
Storytelling
Subjectivity
Systems Thinking
Thinking
Thought Experiment
Unknown Unknowns
Visual Thinking
Want To Believe
Whataboutism
Win-Win Thinking
Wishful Thinking
Worldview
If you enjoyed this page, please consider bookmarking Simplicable.
 

Human Experience

The definition of human experience with examples.

Play

The definition of play with examples.

Emotion

A list of common types of emotion.

Traditions

The definition of tradition with examples.

Technology Opposite

A list of opposites of technology.

Socrates Philosophy

A summary of the philosophy of Socrates.

Happiness

An overview of happiness and its many variations.

Human Nature

A list of the common elements of human nature.

Contentment

An overview of contentment.

Thinking

An overview of thinking with examples.

Opinion

The definition of opinion with examples.

Mindset

A list of common types of mindset.

Ways Of Thinking

A list of thinking approaches and mindsets.

Analytical Thinking

The definition of analytical thinking with examples.

Good Judgement

Complete examples of different types of good judgement.

Salience

The definition of salience with examples.

Cognition

The common types of cognition with examples.

Cognitive Abilities

A list of common cognitive abilities with examples.
The most popular articles on Simplicable in the past day.

New Articles

Recent posts or updates on Simplicable.
Site Map