Friday, 3 April 2009

Human perceptions and interpretation

Human perceptions and interpretation

Our design sensitivity largely depends on our perception. It is the key factor that represents our insight about a subject. The sensibility of a designer enriches with the maturity of his perception. Through our workshop on human perception and interpretation, we were introduced to this new way of pretending a subject or obtaining our views from a different angle. Visual perception is the ability to interpret information from visible light reaching the eye. Perception is often represents visual perception but as a designer we must grow our perception in other ways too. We must learn how to deal with other perceptions such as smell, sound, tactile etc.
Human perception has distinctiveness as it varies form person to person. It even dominates our descriptive vocabulary. We may have our visual limitations in the field of observing comparing to other creatures, but we still have the domination in the field of observing other perception too. It is the point where a designer must mature his perceptions with the illusions too. It may offer us to raise a illusion but it gives us a the satisfaction in obtaining the sights. So even we can feel or make feel the invisible visible, the dimension into dimensions and above all there grows our sensitivity. Our perception also gains maturity with our selectivity and perceptual constancy as well as with our categorization which helps us to simplify our perception. But again there still is a question in uniqueness and particularity which remains unsustainable in the presence of this categorization. Though we do have the easiest way to perceive the sight or object but I prefer the non-categorization process as I think it serves my needs to mature my perception. In some aspects we may have the same perception such as in the field of illusions. Sometimes it gives us the chance of building up an impossible structure in realism but possible in our mind. I may have not understood everything about our perception but for me it represents the form of building up our sensitivity in a subject.

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