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UNIVERSITY OF UDAYANA FACULTY OF ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE Behavioral Architecture “ENVIRONMENTAL PERCEPTION”

Environmental Perception

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Page 1: Environmental Perception

UNIVERSITY OF UDAYANAFACULTY OF ENGINEERING

DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE

Behavioral Architecture

“ENVIRONMENTAL PERCEPTION”

Page 2: Environmental Perception

I MD ARYA ADIARTHA (0604205082)

A.A. GEDE PUTRA DANANJAYA (0604205079)

I WYN BANDEM CAHYADINATHA (0604205073)

I.B. GDE YUDHA PERMANA PUTRA (0604205025)

A.A. NGR AGUNG SATRIA WIBAWA (0604205028)

KM FAJAR NUSANTARA KORI (0604205043)

I GEDE PUTU DHANANJAYA P (0604205064)

GROUP 1

Page 3: Environmental Perception

We’re gonna explain about…..

• Meaning of Environmental Perception– Definition

– Top-down Processing

– Bottom-up Processing

• Characteristics of Meaningful Sensory• Theories of Environmental Perception

– Brunswik’s Probabilistic Model (Conventional Approach)

– Gibson’s Ecological Model (Ecological Approach)

– Gestalt Theory

Page 4: Environmental Perception

Meaning of Environmental Perception

• Perception is the process of receiving information from the environment

• Environmental perception is the process that is at the core of any environmental behavior since it is the source of all information about the environment

• Perception is also a trade-off between speed and accuracy

DEFINITION

Page 5: Environmental Perception

Meaning of Environmental Perception

• Presented by psychologists Glass and Holyoak

• In Top-down processing, the recognition process is driven by expectations of what objects are to be found in a particular environment.

• Can also slow down the perceptual process when encountering “improbable stimuli”.

TOP-DOWN PROCESSING

Page 6: Environmental Perception

Meaning of Environmental Perception

• Bottom-up processing is only active in situations where there are no “probable stimuli” expected by the perceiver.

• Due to the no “probable stimuli” situation, recognition would necessarily take longer.

BOTTOM-UP PROCESSING

Page 7: Environmental Perception

Characteristics of Meaningful Sensory

• The stimuli being received must fit each sensors modality

• The world of perception has the connection with space

• Perception has the dimension of time

• The object being observed has the structure that unites with it’s context

• Structure and Contects is a whole that is united

Page 8: Environmental Perception

Theories of Environmental Perception

• Egon Brunswik’s Probabilistic Model– In Brunswik’s lens model the perceptual process

recieves a scaterred array of environmental stimuli which it filters and recombines into an ordered, unified perception

Page 9: Environmental Perception

Brunswik’s Lens Model

Theories of Environmental Perception

Page 10: Environmental Perception

• Gibson’s Ecological Model– Gibson’s model drawn new interest with the

growth of an evolutionary perspective that emphasizes the adaptation and functioning of organisms in their envionment

– Gibson’s ‘affordances’

Theories of Environmental Perception

Page 11: Environmental Perception

Theories of Environmental Perception

Gestalt Theory– One of the most influential theory that relates to

visual phenomenons.– Three main points of this theory are, form,

isomorphism and field forces– Gestalt Laws : Law of Approach, Law of

Similarity, Closed Form Law, Law of Continuity, and Law of Movement.

Page 12: Environmental Perception

DISCUSSION TIME….

Behavioral Architecture

“ENVIRONMENTAL PERCEPTION”

Page 13: Environmental Perception

THANK YOUFOR YOUR ATTENTION

Behavioral Architecture“ENVIRONMENTAL PERCEPTION”

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