| perception | The quality, state, or capability, of being affected by something external; sensation; sensibility | en |
| Perception | perceptibility | en |
| perception | The extraction of information from sensory stimulation (Association for Children with Learning Difficulties, 1998) | en |
| perception | our awareness of the world and its contents through sensory experience The analysis of perception and the attempt to deal with skeptical arguments about perceptual knowledge are central philosophical topics Perception involves both our capacity to be sensorily affected by external objects and our ability to bring these objects under concepts, although other capacities might also have a role to play What we perceive and how these objects of perception are related to us and to physical objects are matters of continuing concern | en |
| perception | The faculty of perceiving the ability of the mind to refer to sensory information of external objects as their causes Also, the name of a US kayak manufacturer | en |
| perception | awareness of the elements of one's environment by means of the senses; direct or intuitive awareness | en |
| perception | The process through which individuals are exposed to information, attend to that information and comprehend it | en |
| perception | any content of the mind of which we are conscious Hume speaks of "perceptions of the mind" several times in paragraphs 1 through 3 [text] While he does not offer a definition of "perception of the mind" he gives several examples in those paragraphs and the examples include pains, pleasures, anticipations of the imagination, [text] feeling anger, and thinking of anger [text] The phrase "of which we are conscious" appears in paragraph 3 [text] | en |
| perception | The ability to make sense of what one sees, hears, feels, tastes or smells Perceptual losses are often very subtle, and the patient and/or family may be unaware of them | en |
| perception | The process of selecting, organising and interpreting information inputs to produce meaning p 119 | en |
| perception | Visual and sensory awareness, discrimination, and integration of impressions, conditions, and relationships with regard to objects, images and feelings | en |
| perception | A robot's ability to sense its environment by sight, touch, or some other means and to understand it in terms of a task For example, the ability to recognize an obstruction or find a designated object in an arbitrary location | en |
| perception | The process by which we select, organize, and interpret stimuli into a meaningful and coherent picture | en |
| perception | Interpretation of the sensations received by the sensory organs | en |
| perception | That which is detected by the five senses; not necessarily understood (imagine looking through fog, trying to understand if you see a small dog or a cat); also that which is detected within consciousness as a thought, intuition, deduction, etc | en |
| perception | Conscious understanding of something | en |
| perception | Vision (ability) | en |
| perception | percipience | en |
| perception | Acuity | en |
| perception | Awareness of the effects of single or multiple sensory stimuli [ISO 5492] | en |
| perception | the process by which the brain actively selects, organizes and interprets sensory information | en |
| perception | Recognition of a quality without distinguishing meaning, which is the result of a complex set of reactions including sensory stimulation, organization within the nervous system, and memory | en |
| perception | the feelings, attitudes, and images people have of different places, peoples, and environments The images people have in their heads of where places are located are called perceptual or mental maps | en |
| perception | The conscious awareness of sensory inputs, internal states, or memories | en |
| perception | perception level I: the post-separation, dualistic world of form and differences, mutually exclusive of the non-dualistic world of knowledge; this world arises from our belief in separation and has no reality outside of this thought level II: comes from projection: what we see inwardly determines what we see outside ourselves; crucial to perception, therefore, is our interpretation of " reality," rather than what seems to be objectively real w-m: perception of sin and guilt reinforces the belief in the reality of the separation r-m: perception of opportunities to forgive serves to undo the belief in the reality of the separation see: true perception | en |
| perception | Your perception of something is the way that you think about it or the impression you have of it. He is interested in how our perceptions of death affect the way we live | en |
| perception | Someone who has perception realizes or notices things that are not obvious. It did not require a great deal of perception to realise the interview was over | en |
| perception | Perception is the recognition of things using your senses, especially the sense of sight. Process of registering sensory stimuli as meaningful experience. The differences between sensation and perception have varied according to how the terms are defined. A common distinction is that sensations are simple sensory experiences, while percepts are complex constructions of simple elements joined through association. Another is that perception is more subject to the influence of learning. Though hearing, smell, touch, and taste perceptions have all been explored, vision has received the most attention. Structuralist researchers such as Edward Bradford Titchener focused on the constituent elements of visual perceptions, whereas Gestalt psychology has stressed the need to examine organized wholes, believing humans are disposed to identifying patterns. Visual objects tend to appear stable despite continually changing stimulus features (such as ambient light, perspective, ground vs. figure arrangement), which enables an observer to match a perceived object with the object as it is understood to exist. Perceptions may be influenced by expectations, needs, unconscious ideas, values, and conflicts. sense perception taste perception extrasensory perception | en |
| perception | the representation of what is perceived; basic component in the formation of a concept | en |
| perception | sense, feeling, intuition; comprehension, understanding isim | en |
| perception | The act of perceiving; cognizance by the senses or intellect; apperhension by the bodily organs, or by the mind, of what is presented to them; discernment; apperhension; cognition | en |
| perception | An idea; a notion | en |
| perception | the process of perceiving knowledge gained by perceiving; "a man admired for the depth of his perception" | en |
| perception | a way of conceiving something; "Luther had a new perception of the Bible | en |
| perception | The faculty of perceiving; the faculty, or peculiar part, of man's constitution by which he has knowledge through the medium or instrumentality of the bodily organs; the act of apperhending material objects or qualities through the senses; distinguished from conception | en |
| perception | the process of perceiving knowledge gained by perceiving; "a man admired for the depth of his perception" a way of conceiving something; "Luther had a new perception of the Bible | en |
| perception | a way of conceiving something; "Luther had a new perception of the Bible" | en |
| perception | The process by which a person selects, organises, and interprets information | en |
| perception | The process of organizing and using information that is received through the senses | en |
| perception | The process of knowing or being aware of information through the ear | en |
| perception | The branch of psychology that deals with the detection and interpretation of sensory stimuli (Solso) | en |
| perception | the process of perceiving | en |
| perception | The process by which people select, organize, and interpret information to form a meaningful picture of the world | en |
| perception | becoming aware of something via the senses | en |
| perception | (hearing) - process of knowing or being aware of information through the ear | en |
| perception | process of knowing or being aware of information through the ear | en |
| perception | knowledge gained by perceiving; "a man admired for the depth of his perception" | en |
| perceptions | plural of perception | en |