Prosopagnosia Agnosia: A failure of recognition that is not attributable to a sensory deficit or to verbal or intellectual impairment Visual agnosia: Specific.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sensory Reception Chapter 31.
Advertisements

HEARING Sound How the Ears Work How the Cochlea Works Auditory Pathway
The Stimulus Input: Sound Waves
Sensation- Day 2 Review Questions: 1.Define sensation and perception, and discriminate between the two. 2.What is the retina, and what happens there? 3.Describe.
The Ear Parts, Functions and Hearing Process
 Your ears are sense organs that respond to the stimulus of sound.  The sound waves are picked up from the surrounding air, and they are turned into.
Sensory systems Chapter 16.
Unit 4: Sensation & Perception
HEARING. SOUND Sound is vibrations of molecules Amplitude, wavelength, and purity affect qualities of loudness, pitch, and timbre.
Hearing: physiology.
Hearing: How do we hear?.
Hearing Review The sense of hearing is also known as the AUDITORY system. Sound travels in waves and aspects of these waves determine the sound we hear.
From Vibration to Sound
Copyright © 2009 Allyn & Bacon
The Auditory System Dr. Kline FSU. What is the physical stimulus for audition? Sound- vibrations of the molecules in a medium like air. The hearing spectrum.
The Auditory Process. Stimulus  Distal Stimulus- in our environment produces a proximal stimulus  Proximal Stimulus- form of sound waves reaching the.
9.6 Hearing and Equilibrium
Hearing: How do we hear?. Hearing: The Nature of Sound Module 9: Sensation.
1 Hearing or Audition Module 14. Hearing Our auditory sense.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Dee Unglaub Silverthorn, Ph.D. H UMAN P HYSIOLOGY PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide.
By: Ellie Erehart, Angie Barco, Maggie Rieger, Tj Myers and Kameron Thomas.
Special Sensory Reception
SENSE OF HEARING EAR. Ear Consists of 3 parts –External ear Consists of pinna, external auditory meatus, and tympanum Transmits airborne sound waves to.
Hearing Test ng_test/ ng_test/
Sense of Hearing External Ear Auricle (pinna) - outer ear External Auditory Meatus.
Hearing: How do we hear?. Hearing: The Nature of Sound Module 9: Sensation.
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Instructor name Class Title, Term/Semester, Year Institution Introductory Psychology Concepts Hearing.
Sensation- Day 2 Review Questions: 1.Define sensation and perception, and discriminate between the two. 2.What is the retina, and what happens there? 3.Describe.
Special Senses Ear Dr. M. Diamond. The Ear Houses two senses –Hearing –Equilibrium (balance) Receptors are mechanoreceptors Different organs house receptors.
The Retina Retina is a delicate tissue composed of two layers Sensory layer contains photoreceptors (rods and cones) that sense light Sensory layer consists.
The Ears and Hearing.
Topic Sense of hearing. Topic Sense of hearing.
The Ear Change the graphics to symbolize different functions of the ear that are brought up on the next slide.
1 Psychology 304: Brain and Behaviour Lecture 24.
Chapter Seven Nonvisual Sensation and Perception.
MECHANISMS OF Perception.
Perception: Hearing Sound: Amplitude – loudness (decibels)
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings H UMAN P HYSIOLOGY Sensory Physiology_hearing.
SPECIAL SENSES 12.4 HEARING. SPECIAL SENSES: HEARING Structures of the Ear –Outer Ear Auricle: visible part of the ear –Collects sound waves and directs.
THE EAR is a sensory organ responsible for both hearing and maintenance of balance composed of three sections: the outer, middle and inner ear.
Hearing: How do we hear?. Our Essential Questions What are the major parts of the ear? How does the ear translate sound into neural impulses?
Table of Contents Chapter 4 Part 3 Sensation and Perception.
The Marvelous Ear. How Do Our Ears Work? Quiz 1. How do humans hear sounds? 2. How does human hearing work? Sketch and label the system. 3. Do you know.
Hearing. Anatomy of the Ear How the Ear Works The outer ear The pinna, which is the external part of the ear, collects sounds and funnels them through.
The Process of Hearing 1. Sound is caused by vibrations/waves moving through a medium.
The Ear. Functions of the Ear There are three parts to the Ear:
Symptoms of vision loss in individuals with Refsum disease include cataracts and impaired night vision. Which of the following rows identifies the structure.
Hearing As with the eye, the ear receives waves, this time of sounds. As with the eye, the ear receives waves, this time of sounds. Length of wave = pitch.
PAGE 135 TEXT!. Do You Hear What I Hear? The outer ear funnels sound waves to the eardrum. The bones or ossicles (Hammer {malleus}, Anvil {incus} & Stirrups.
Hearing Aka: Audition. Frequency the number of complete wavelengths that pass through point at a given time. This determines the pitch of a sound.
Auditory System Lesson 14. The Stimulus n What kind of energy is sound? l mechanical l movement of air molecules n Waves l intensity = amplitude l pitch.
Biology Department 1. 2  The ear is the organ of hearing and, in mammals, balance.  In mammals, the ear is usually described as having three parts:
Pinna The Pinna is the shell like part of the ear made of cartilage and skin Outer Ear- cups sound and directs it to the external auditory canal (ear.
PSY2301: Biological Foundations of Behavior The Auditory System Chapter 10.
Auditory System…What??? It plays an important role in language development and social interactions… Plus…it alerts us to dangerous situations! The auditory.
Auditory System: Sound
Ear and the hearing process.
Review: Hearing.
Hearing.
8 Special Senses.
Hearing: How do we hear?.
A.3 Perception of Stimuli
Section 14.3 Hearing and Equilibrium
Hearing: The Nature of Sound
Special Senses: The Ear
Auditory System Lecture 13.
How We Hear.
Hearing: How do we hear?.
Organs of Hearing Organ of Corti - Located within the cochlea
Chapter 5 Hearing.
Presentation transcript:

Prosopagnosia Agnosia: A failure of recognition that is not attributable to a sensory deficit or to verbal or intellectual impairment Visual agnosia: Specific agnosia for visual stimuli Can see visual stimuli but don’t know what they are Agnosia can often be for a particular aspect of vision (ex: color, movement, object) Prosopagnosia: Specific visual agnosia for faces

Prosopagnosia Usually know it is a face, but don’t know whose Some see a jumble of facial features Some can’t recognize themselves! Some evidence suggests that this is really an inability to identify individual items from a group; not just faces Often associated with damage to ventral stream Specifically fusiform face area Can still recognize faces, just aren’t consciously aware of it

M ECHANISMS OF P ERCEPTION : H EARING, T OUCH, S MELL, T ASTE & A TTENTION

This chapter covers 4 of the 5 exteroceptive sensory systems 1. Auditory (hearing) 2. Somatosensory (touch) 3. Olfactory (smell) 4. Gustatory (taste)

S ENSORY S YSTEM O RGANIZATION Like with vision, the other sensory systems are organized in a hierarchical fashion (in levels) Primary sensory cortex Receives most of its input directly from thalamic relay nuclei for that sense Secondary sensory cortex Input from primary & other areas of 2ndary for that sense Association cortex Any area of cortex that gets info from more than one sensory system; usual from 2ndary

S ENSORY S YSTEM O RGANIZATION Hierarchical Organization As you go up levels, the neurons respond to stimuli of greater specificity and complexity Adds another layer of analysis as it to a new level The higher the level of damage in the system, the more specific & complex the sensory deficit Functional Segregation Each level of the cortex in each sensory system contains functionally distinct areas that specialize in different kinds of analysis Parallel Processing Info in sensory systems flows through multiple pathways & undergo simultaneous analysis in different ways along these different paths ( not a serial system )

The brain transmits sensory information to/from multiple places at multiple levels in multiple directions from multiple senses & integrates it all together!

S ENSORY S YSTEM D IVISION Psychologists divide the general process of perceiving stimuli into 2 phases 1. Sensation Process of detecting the presence of stimuli 2. Perception Higher-order process of integrating, recognizing & interpreting complete patterns of sensations

A UDITORY S YSTEM Function: perception of sound Sounds: vibrations of air molecules that stimulate the auditory system; come in waves Human hearing is within the 20-20,000Htz range

T HE E AR & S OUND Sound waves are caught & funneled into the ear by the pinna Sound travels from the outer ear down the auditory canal & causes the tympanic membrane (eardrum) to vibrate The vibrations are then transferred to the 3 ossicles (tiny bones of the middle ear) 1. Malleus (hammer) 2. Incus (anvil) 3. Stapes (stirrup)

Vibrations of the stapes cause the oval window membrane to vibrate, which sends the vibrations to the fluid in the cochlea The cochlea is a long coiled tube with a membrane (the organ of Corti ) running along it This is the official auditory receptor organ Each pressure change at the oval window sends a wave down the organ of Corti, which shifts its 2 membranes: basilar & tectorial These membranes are covered in hair cells (auditory receptors) & when they bend due to the shift in membrane, they fire APs within the auditory nerve The vibrations ultimately are dissipated by the round window

V ESTIBULAR S YSTEM The vestibular system is responsible for dealing with information regarding the direction & intensity of head movements; essentially balance & staying upright The receptive organs of this system are the semiciruclar canals

E AR TO P RIMARY A UDITORY C ORTEX No major pathway, but a network of pathways Each auditory nerve synapses in the ipsilateral cochlear nuclei, then to the superior olives on both sides, to inferior colliculi, to medial geniculate nuclei (MGN of thalamus) to primary auditory cortex

S UBCORTICAL M ECHANISMS OF S OUND L OCALIZATION You determine the location of sound based on the fact that a sound will reach one ear slightly earlier and louder than the other Neurons in the medial superior olive responds to the different timing Neurons in the lateral superior olives respond to the different amplitude The olives send the signal to the superior colliculus, which maps out the location of the sound

A UDITORY C ORTEX

2 S TREAMS OF A UDITORY C ORTEX Like the visual system, there are 2 streams of audition 1. Anterior auditory pathway To prefrontal cortex Mostly involved in identifying sounds (what) 2. Posterior auditory pathway To posterior parietal cortex Involved in locating sounds (where)

D EAFNESS IN H UMANS One of the most prevalent disabilities But total deafness is rare (only 1% of hearing- impaired) Likely due to the network of the auditory system 2 common classes of hearing impairment 1. Conductive deafness Damage to the ossicles 2. Nerve deafness Damage to the cochlea or auditory nerve Most common cause is loss of hair cells Partial damage to cochlea results in deafness for only some frequencies Age-related hearing loss