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Published byErick Baker Modified over 9 years ago
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Other Senses: Outline Balance (Vestibular System) Taste Smell Touch
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Balance Three sources of balance: –Vision –Stretch receptors in muscles –Vestibular system Worst case scenario: –getting up in the middle of the night (no vision), from your futon (poor info from stretch receptors), in a yacht (poor vestibular info).
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Balance Coordinates head & body movements Keep eyes fixed when head moves Semicircular Canals Rotations (3-D) Dizziness is triggered -By rotation (kids) -By hot water in ear: stimulates movement of fluid in vestibular chambers -vertigo Vestibular System: Functions
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Vestibular Sacs: Function –linear accelerations –static head positions From inner ear, output goes to Medulla & from there to: - Spinal Cord, - Oculomotor Nerve, - Cortex, - Cerebellum
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Flavor is inferred from: –Taste (5) – Smell (500-10,000 odors), and –Tactile information, & pain receptors (chili peppers) Supertasters –Genetic differences in receptors –Increased sensitivity to bitterness, sweet Taste
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Taste Receptors Papillae Bitter Sweet Sour: Saltiness: Na+ channel Umami –elicited by the amino acid glutamate found in proteins (meat, fish, beans, ketchup) –MSG (monosodium glutamate)
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Taste Pathway Orbitofrontal cortex (S2) Amygdala Post central gyrus and Insula (S1) Thalamus Medulla Cranial nerves Amygdala & OFC are important for valence, reinforcement
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Olfactory System The primary mode of communication for most animals Critical for survival –eating toxic substances often smell/taste bad; good things smell good –reproduction mating partners aggression in rivals –location of predators and prey
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Olfactory Anatomy Olfactory tract projects to –amygdala, –hippocampus –hypothalamus –Insula
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Pheromones Airborne molecules that affect behavior Especially involved in reproduction VNO- Vomeronasal Organ –Physically distinct –evolved separately –Projects to Limbic areas VNO
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Somatosenses The stimuli The cutaneous senses respond to several different types of stimuli: pressure, vibration, heating, cooling, and events that cause tissue damage (and hence pain). Some receptors report changes in muscle length to the brain; providing our sense of kinethesia. Additional receptors provide information about the internal organs such as the linings of muscles and the gastrointestinal system.
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Somatosenses Anatomy of the Skin and its Receptive Organs Cuntaneous sense: One of the somatosenses; includes sensitivity to stimuli that involve the skin. Kinesthesia: Perception of the body’s own movements. Organic sense: A sense modality that arises from receptors located within the inner organs of the body.
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