Spinal Cord. It is continuous with the medulla oblongata Extends from the foramen magnum of the occipital bone to the upper boarder of L2 2 main Functions:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Ear & Hearing By Michael J. Harman .
Advertisements

THE AUDITORY (ACOUSTIC) SYSTEM
Chapter 8 – Special Senses
Mechanoreception – Audition and Equilibrium
Hearing and Equilibrium
The Ear Parts, Functions and Hearing Process
Have you heard the news??? It’s ear time!!. Trivia Question What are the smallest bones in the body? OssiclesOssicles These bones are fully developed.
The Vestibule The utricle extends into the _ These sacs: – House ___________________________________ called maculae – Respond to _______________________________.
The Vestibule The utricle extends into the _ These sacs: – House ___________________________________ called maculae – Respond to _______________________________.
Sensory System Ear: Sound & Balance.
The Ear: Hearing and Balance
The Ear and Hearing.
Ears, Hearing.
Spinal Cord, Human Reflex
 Sensory Receptors - detect environmental changes and trigger nerve impulses  Somatic Senses  Touch, pressure, temperature, pain  Special Senses 
Anatomy of the Ear Region
Organ of balance and hearing
Sense Organs II: The Ear
Figure The Anatomy of the Ear
The Ear.
Warm up 03/06/2012 The oily secretions that lubricate the eye are produced by the: A) ceruminous glands B) lacrimal glands C) meibomian glands D) apocrine.
Chapter 8 Special Senses: Hearing & Equilibrium
Special Senses: The Ear and Hearing Ch. 8b. The Ear Slide 8.20 Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings  Houses two senses.
1 Hole’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Twelfth Edition Shier  Butler  Lewis Chapter 12 Nervous System III: Senses Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies,
The nervous system: the ear
Special Sensory Reception
Sense of Hearing and Equilibrium
Spinal Cord 12/14 CNS tissue is enclosed within vertebral column; begins at foramen magnum and ends at L 1 or L 2 Functions – Provides two-way communication.
Sense of Hearing External Ear Auricle (pinna) - outer ear External Auditory Meatus.
Special Senses Lecture Hearing. Our ears actually serve two functions: 1)Allow us to hear 2)Maintain balance and equilibrium Hearing and balance work.
9.6 Hearing and Equilibrium Pages The Ear Two separate functions: hearing and equilibrium Cilia: tiny hair cells that respond to mechanical stimuli.
The Central Nervous System Poudre High School By: Ben Kirk.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings  Hearing – allows us to detect and interpret sound waves  Equilibrium – inform.
Special Senses Ear Dr. M. Diamond. The Ear Houses two senses –Hearing –Equilibrium (balance) Receptors are mechanoreceptors Different organs house receptors.
Sense of Hearing and Equilibrium. 3 Parts Sense of Hearing o Made up of: Outer ear Middle ear Inner ear Ear also functions as sense of equilibrium.
Human Anatomy & Physiology FIFTH EDITION Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by Vince Austin Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc.
CHAPTER 49 SENSORY AND MOTOR SYSTEMS Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Section D: Hearing And Equilibrium 1. The.
The Ear Change the graphics to symbolize different functions of the ear that are brought up on the next slide.
Special Senses Hearing. Ear is a very sensitive structure. – The sensory receptors convert vibrations 1,000 times faster than the photoreceptors of the.
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure The Anatomy of the Ear External Ear Elastic cartilages Auricle External acoustic meatus Tympanic membrane Tympanic.
Chapter 15 B The Ear.  The External Ear  Auricle  Surrounds entrance to external acoustic meatus  Protects opening of canal  Provides directional.
Anatomy and Physiology
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture.
Spinal Cord and Spinal Reflexes. Gross Spinal Anatomy Connects brain to body carries impulses to and from brain. Extends from brain to L1 Braches to create.
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings H UMAN P HYSIOLOGY Sensory Physiology_hearing.
EAR.
March 25 th, 2010 Objective: Review the workings of the nose, tongue, and ear. –Coloring –Notes Do Now – get markers and start coloring!
1 Special Senses sensory receptors are within large, complex sensory organs in the head smell in olfactory organs taste in taste buds hearing and equilibrium.
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.
OUTER EAR Structures – Pinna – External Auditory Canal – Tympanic Membrane Boundary between outer and middle ear Transfers sound vibrations to bones of.
Special Senses- The Ear
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition Elaine N. Marieb PowerPoint ® Lecture.
Hearing.
The Ear. Functions of the Ear There are three parts to the Ear:
The Ear Hearing and Balance. The Ear: Hearing and Balance The three parts of the ear are the inner, outer, and middle ear The outer and middle ear are.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Chapter 15 The Special Senses The Ear.
S ENSORY O RGANS (V ISION, H EARING, AND EQUILIBRIUM ) Ears.
1. Auricle/Pinnae – funnel-like structure that helps collect sound waves 2. External Acoustic Meatus (EAM)/external auditory canal – s – shaped tube that.
Anatomy of the Ear Three Main Sections
Ear Ossicles Malleus, incus, and stapes Transmit vibrations to the oval window Dampened by the tensor tympani and stapedius muscles.
Sense of Hearing and Equilibrium
Chapter 19 Special Senses
8 Special Senses.
Hearing and Equilibrium
Special Senses The Ear.
Senses: Hearing and Equilibrium
Auditory.
SENSORY PHYSIOLOGY: THE EAR
The Auditory Pathway This graphic depicts the events in the stimulation of auditory receptors, from channeling sound waves into the external ear and onto.
Presentation transcript:

Spinal Cord

It is continuous with the medulla oblongata Extends from the foramen magnum of the occipital bone to the upper boarder of L2 2 main Functions: – Impulse conduction Communication to and from the brain through tracts of white matter – Reflex integration Reflexive movements as opposed to those initiated voluntarily

There are 31 pairs of spinal nerves – C1-C8 – T1-T12 – L1-L5 – 5 sacral nerves

Gray & White Matter Gray Matter: – Nerve cell bodies, neuroglia, axon terminals, and unmyelinated association neurons (interneurons) White matter – Bundles or tracts of myelinated fibers of sensory and motor neurons

Horns Ventral Horn – Cell bodies and dendrites of the Somatic motor neuron cell bodies and dendrites Dorsal Horn – Somatic & Autonomic: sensory axons from the sensory nerve roots Lateral Horn – Present only in thoracic, lumbar, and sacral segments of the cord – Contain cell bodies of the autonomic motor neurons and interneurons

Figure 11.1 Nervous System

Reflex Arc Figure Receptor Sensory neuron Integration center 5 Effector Motor neuron Stimulus Skin Spinal cord (in cross-section) Interneuron

Denticulate ligament – Formed by lateral extensions of pia mater – Attaches the spinal cord to the dura mater – Anchors spinal cord in place

Reflexes Fast, predictable, automated responses to changes in the environment Somatic reflexes involve contraction of skeletal muscles There are automatic or visceral reflexes which we are not usually conscious of

Reflex Arc Pathway followed by nerve impulses that produce a reflex – 5 functional components 1.Sensory receptor 2.Sensory neuron 3.Integrating center (in gray matter where sensory and motor neuron synapse) 4.Motor neuron 5.Effector (part of body that responds to the motor impulse

Reflex Arc Figure Receptor Sensory neuron Integration center 5 Effector Motor neuron Stimulus Skin Spinal cord (in cross-section) Interneuron

Somatic Reflexes Stretch Reflexes – Involves only two neurons and one synapse (monosynaptic reflex arc) – Stretch reflexes can be elicited at the elbow, wrist, knee and ankle joints – Examples: Patella or knee-jerk reflex Achilles or ankle-jerk reflex – (Dorsiflex the ankle and tap the Achilles tendon

Stretch Reflex Figure ____

Superficial cord reflexes: – (abdominal, cremaster, and plantar) result from pain and temperature changes – Example: Plantar reflex Stimulate cutaneous receptors on the sole of the foot Babinski’s reflex: damage to pyramidal (corticospinal) tract

Nervous Physiology Extra Credit Complete these activities in lab book (listed in your outline) Have to answer questions from the activity to get credit  can do all these at home: – Reaction time from a learned stimulus (with the ruler) p.345 Act.9 – Two-point discrimination p356 Act.2 – Adaptation of touch receptors p.357 Act. 5 – Determination of blind spot p. 371 Act. 5 From Outline- Write a really short paragraph about what happened – “B-r-r-r, That’s Hot” 2 points for each assignment completed

Ear 2 Important Functions – Hearing The conversion of sounds waves (mechanical and fluid) into action potentials (electrical) – Equilibrium Ability to subconsciously detect changes in head position, rotational movement and acceleration/deceleration Reflexes maintain the body in a stable position in spite of any changes or movements

Ear is divided into 3 regions External Ear – Collect sound waves and channels them Middle Ear – Conveys sound vibration Inner Ear – Labyrinth that houses receptors for hearing and equilibrium

External Ear Pinna or auricle – Flap of elastic cartilage External auditory canal (or meatus) Ceruminious glands (blue on model) – Secrete earwax (cerumen) Tympanic membrane (eardrum)

Middle Ear Ear Ossicles – Malleus, Incus, Stapes – (MAiling, INCludes, STAmps) Auditory tube (phayngotympanic tubes) – Duct connecting middle ear to throat Oval Window – Creates fluid waves within cochlea Round window – Equalizes pressure created by vibration of oval window

Inner Ear Bony chambers called osseous or bony labyrinth – Cochlea (hearing) – Vestibule (equilibrium) Consists of 2 sacs: Utricle & saccule – House equilibrium receptor regions: maculae – Semicircular canals (equilibrium) Respond to rotational movement in head Ampulla – Base of semicircular canals – Houses equilibrium receptor (crista ampullaris)

Inner Ear Figure 15.27

Cochlea Scala vestibuli – Provides brain with info concerning position Scala tympani Cochlear duct Tectorial membrane – Where hair cells are embedded

Auditory Transduction Video Noc Noc