Perception: Definition in Organizational Behavior

Geektonight.com
3 min readOct 14, 2019

Perception is the organization, identification, and interpretation of sensory information in order to represent and understand the environment.

According to Joseph Reitz; “Perception includes all those processes by which an individual receives information about his environment — seeing, hearing, feeling, tasting and smelling.”

According to B. V. H. Gilmer, “Perception is the process of becoming aware of situations, of adding meaningful associations to sensations.”

Uday Pareek said perception can be defined as “the process of receiving, selecting, organizing, interpreting, checking, and reacting to sensory stimuli or data.”

Factors affecting Perception

The factors which affect the perception are shown in the figure below:

Process of Perception

  • Reception: In this process, a person receives the information through stimuli.
  • Selection: This is governed by two types of factors:
  • External factors: These are size, intensity, proximity, motion and novelty.
  • Internal factors: These are attitude, motives, experiences, interests and expectations.
  • Organization: It is the process by which we sort stimuli into a meaningful pattern. It involves the following:
  • Grouping: Assembling of stimuli on the grounds of similarity.
  • Proximity: This is the closeness of stimuli to one another that affects perception.
  • Closure: It is the ability to organize stimuli so that together they form a whole pattern.
  • Interpretation: It is the formation of an idea about the information that is sensed, selected and organized. It involves the following phenomena: primacy effect, selective perception, stereotyping, halo effect, projection and expectancy effect. They are the types of perceptual errors.
  • Primacy/ Recency Effect: The first impression is given the most important which is known as the primacy effect. Recency effect, on the other hand, is that human beings remember latest events more than the less recent ones.
  • Stereotyping: It is the effect caused by forming a certain belief about a category of stimuli and generalizing that notion to encounters with each member of that category. In reality, there is a difference between the perceived notion of each category and the actual traits of the members. It may affect the interview process in an organization.
  • Halo effect: It is the process of generalizing from a comprehensive analysis to a single attribute or trait. A negative halo effect is known as the reverse halo effect. It affects the performance appraisal of employees in a company.
  • Projection: It is a psychological defence mechanism which makes a person compare his negative traits with other people and conclude that they are better off than others. Perceptual checking minimizes the negative effects of projection.
  • Selective Perception: This means a person sees, feels or hears what he wants to and skips other information which are inconsistent to his view.
  • Expectancy effect: It is the tendency of an individual to interpret any person or object based on how he expects the person or object to be in the first place. It is also called as Pygmalion effect.

Read More:

  1. What is Organizational Behavior? | Definition, Importance, Model
  2. Personality in Organisational Behavior | Determinants, Nature, Definition
  3. Theories of Personality | Psychoanalytic, Type, Trait, Self Theory
  4. Perception | Definition, Nature, Factors Influence Perception What is
  5. Learning? Definition, Nature, Learning Process, Types
  6. Theories of Learning | Classical, Operant Conditioning, Cognitive, Social
  7. What is Attitude? Meaning, Functions, Types, Importance, Components
  8. What is Motivation? | Definition, Types, Theories, Importance
  9. Motivation Theories in Management | Explained
  10. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs | Definition, Example
  11. Two Factor Theory | Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory
  12. Vroom’s Expectancy Theory of Motivation

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