Topic > Sensation and perception: the process of feeling and…

Absorbing information and converting it into meaningful information, which could help us understand life and make good and wise decisions. A minimum amount of stimulation has to occur, so our organ can detect these stimuli and that's the absolute threshold, which basically means that you won't be able to smell something really far away from you, unless that thing reaches the amount minimal stimulation and your nose can now smell it. The lack or loss of one or more senses would create a large gap in the way we experience things around us and a failure of perception will make it more difficult to understand the full picture of what is happening around us and will cause the inability to answer. to a current situation. For example, if someone is blind, it will be difficult for the brain to get the full picture and understand it to make a wise decision. But surprisingly our brain connects to other sensory organs to get the information needed to get a complete picture to survive. I have a friend who has been blind since he was two years old, when I asked him how you see or imagine the chair, he described the chair exactly as we see it, but without the color. His brain works with the lack of visual information as a way to connect to other sensory organs to achieve the same results that we can see and he cannot. It doesn't mean