|
the sensory apparatus감각 기관
a piece of laboratory apparatus실험실 기구 하나
the power of the state apparatus국가 기구의 권력
오감 (五感)에
감사하는 성숙한 인간
영어 이야기 2013
sensory
[ ˈsensəri ]
감각의
세계적인 시각 장애 가수 Ray Charles 는
"내가 듣지 못하고 볼 수 있지 않고
볼 수 없지만 들을 수 있는 것이 다행이다,"라고 말했다
Listen. Do you hear that?" Others couldn't hear anything.
A blissful smile crossed Charle's face
as he listened to a bird singing.
다른 사람들이 아무 소리도 들을 수 없었는데 Ray Charles 는
새의 노래를 들을 수 있어서 그의 얼굴이
복된 미소가 넘쳤다.
Much of the information comes through the SENSORY organs:
the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin.
많은 정보가 눈, 귀, 코, 혀 그리고 피부의
오감을 통해서 나타난다
그런데 그 오감 기관 가운데 '눈'이 앞에 온댜.
시청후미촉 (視聽嗅味觸)
Sight accounts for 90 to 95 percent of all SENSORY perceptions.
보는 것은 감각 기관의 90~95 퍼센트를 차지한다
앞에서 말한 Ray Charles 는 90~95 퍼센트의
감각없이 단지 청력의 발달로
완전한 5감을 가진 사람들을 부끄럽게 (?) 한 셈이다
물론 오감의 균형이 잡혀야
The balanced SENSORY input is entirely pleasing.
"균형잡힌 감각 형성은 전체의 기쁨이다,"라고 하지만
오감을 완전히 갖추고
기쁨과 감격을 모르는 사람은 Ray Charles 와 같은 사람에게
뭐라고 답을 할지 궁금하다
이토록 오감의 '왕'인 시력을 완전하게 갖추었으면서
comuter monotor 를 지나치게 들여다보는
사람들은 그 고마움을 모르는 듯하다
SENSORY hypersensitivity can cause chronic pain.
감각 과민증은 만성적 고통의 원인일 수 있다
아직까지 (좀 약한 부분이 있기는 해도)
오감을 누리며 사는 사람은 불평할 이유가 없다
Those who have robust SENSORY can't complain
what they are..
왕성한 오감을 가진 사람들은 자신들이 어떤 입장이든 불평할 수 없다
Much of this information comes through the sensory organs:
the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin
A robust sensory encounter includes sights and sounds
white noise or earplugs to block the sensory stimulation
Persons who have a sensory impairment, including blindnes
the balanced sensory input is entirely pleasing.
Motor impairments cause more problems than sensory impairments.
a person with a sensory impairment
Sensory hypersensitivity can cause chronic pain.
Like that sensory overload of stepping out of the airport after a long flight.
The music at the concert was so loud that it felt like a sensory attack.
Several competitive underwater sports are practiced without breathing apparatus .
The Israeli security apparatus is in close contact with the CIA despite their unwillingness to admit it
Firefighters needed breathing apparatus to enter the burning house.
nearly suffocated when the pipe on my breathing apparatus came adrift
Each miner had breathing apparatus that provided an hour's worth of oxygen.
Women divers went deep into the sea to pick abalones withous breathing APPARATUS
Sally Augustin Ph.D.
People, Places, and Things
Design With All Your Senses
Your apparatus is the collective equipment you use for specific purposes. For example, the apparatus used for scuba diving includes goggles, flippers, and a breathing tank, while a surgeon's apparatus includes various scalpels and clamps. |
Being is more than seeing.
Posted April 14, 2023
Reviewed by Ekua Hagan
KEY POINTS
A person's dominant sense affects how they experience a particular space.
Designing a space solely based on looks is not enough to create a fully supportive experience.
Certain design materials may have unexpected downsides that aren't revealed until the designer tries them out.
Each of us has a dominant sense. That dominant sense significantly affects how the world around us influences our thoughts and behavior.
For a lot of us, our dominant sense is vision.
That means, as start to put the design for a space together, many of us get caught up in what it will look like—which is not surprising since we often seek design inspiration by reviewing options online and in design magazines.
article continues after advertisement
However, vision is not the only sensory route from outside our heads to inside them.
Many people experience the world through other sensory channels—they hear things and feel textures, for instance.
Regardless of the specific set of operational
sensory apparatus we have,
we combine the inputs we gather about our physical environment into holistic impression
Then, we consciously come up with a plan for how to think and behave wherever we are.
Consider the full range of experiences in your space
When developing a space, keeping in mind the full range of experiences people will have in it will determine if you generate an alternative that simply excels on one parameter (for example, it “photographs well”) or an area that supports the life you planned.
sensory (adj.)
"of or pertaining to sense or sensation, conveying sensation," 1749, from Latin sensorius, from sensus, past participle of sentire "to perceive, feel" (see sense (n.)).
Entries linking to sensory
late 14c., "meaning, signification, interpretation" (especially of Holy Scripture); c. 1400, "the faculty of perception;" from Old French sens "one of the five senses; meaning; wit, understanding" (12c.) and directly from Latin sensus "perception, feeling, undertaking, meaning," from sentire "perceive, feel, know."
This probably is a figurative use of a literal meaning "find one's way," or "go mentally." According to Watkins and others, this is from a PIE root *sent- "to go" (source also of Old High German sinnan "to go, travel, strive after, have in mind, perceive," German Sinn "sense, mind," Old English sið "way, journey," Old Irish set, Welsh hynt "way").
The application to any one of the external or outward senses (touch, sight, hearing, any special faculty of sensation connected with a bodily organ) in English is recorded from 1520s. They usually are reckoned as five; sometimes a "muscular sense" and "inner (common) sense" are added (perhaps to make the perfect seven), hence the old phrase the seven senses, sometimes meaning "consciousness in its totality." For the meaning "consciousness, mind generally," see senses.
The meaning "that which is wise, judicious, sensible, or intelligent" is from c. 1600. The meaning "capacity for perception and appreciation" also is from c. 1600 (as in sense of humor, attested by 1783, sense of shame, 1640s). The meaning "a vague consciousness or feeling" is from 1590s.
also extra-sensory, "beyond or not involving the usual senses," 1934, coined as part of extra-sensory perception in J.B. Rhine's work, from extra- + sensory. Extrasensible (1874) was used earlier in reference to "that which is inaccessible to the senses."
*****************
Why Some People Are Better at Assessing Risk Than Others Cognitive reflection is a skill, and not one necessarily tied to intelligence. Posted February 25, 2022 KEY POINTS People often make judgments about risk using their emotional responses rather than making effortful deliberations—the "affect heuristic". Some people are more predisposed than others to bypass their emotional response during risk judgments. Other people are more likely to rely on gut instincts and intuition in making decisions. of the most prominent features of our cognitive apparatus is our ability to understand and reason about risk. Don’t believe me? Consider a typical day in your daily life. |
*************************
apparatus (n.)
"a collection of tools, utensils, etc. adapted as a means to some end," 1620s, from Latin apparatus "tools, implements, equipment; preparation, a preparing," noun of state from past-participle stem of apparare "prepare," from ad "to" (see ad-) + parare "make ready" (from PIE root *pere- (1) "to produce, procure").
A marble floor that’s lovely to look at can lead to annoying sounds as people walk across it. (For example, consider the clip of high-heeled shoes or the screech of sneakers.) A natural fiber that seems like the perfect fabric for the sofa, because it blends so well with the wallpaper, may be incredibly itchy under the elbows resting on the arms of that sofa. Or, perhaps even worse, it may not have a “positive” smell—for example, it may inherently smell like a wet dog or capture and retain the smell of any wet dog that happens to travel by it.
article continues after advertisement
Spend time with your design materials first
It's best not to mentally commit to designing with something until you’ve spent at least a little bit of time in its presence—that’ll likely be enough to alert you to squeaky, itchy, and stinky stuff, for instance. Spending time with something before “working it in” can be difficult now that online shopping is such a big part of our lives, so be alert to return policies. Having to keep using something that’s unpleasant to spend time around can destroy your well-being.
Not all sensory consequences will be obvious
Bear in mind that not all of the bad sensations that tag along with the good ones will necessarily broadcast their undesirable presence.
An example: A chair that looks wonderful, positioned in the middle of a space with people walking in front of and behind it, won’t be an A+ place to be when the person sitting in it can hear movement behind them as they sit. Sensing movement behind us is stressful; when we were a young species, things behind us might have been getting ready to eat us, and our brains have not forgotten that. The visuals of that chair position and the sounds of someone actually sitting in it don’t align. (The more subtle lesson here: Layouts/floorplans have sensory consequences.)
Design for all of your senses so you can spend time in places where you and others live the lives that you’ve planned.