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Published byJunior O’Neal’ Modified over 9 years ago
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The Senses
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Somatic – general senses; located all over the body ◦ Pain ◦ Touch ◦ Pressure ◦ Temperature Special – associated with one area of the body ◦ Hearing ◦ Sight ◦ Taste ◦ Equilibrium ◦ Smelling
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Chemoreceptors Pain receptors Thermoreceptors Mechanoreceptors Photoreceptors Δ chemicals Tissue damage Δ temperature Δ pressure/position Δ light
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Sensation – Sensory receptors reach threshold and brain becomes aware of a sensory event Perception – How your brain interprets that sensation Projection – Cerebral cortex causes the feeling to seem to come from the affected area
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Adaptation – Ability of the nervous system to become less responsive to maintained stimulus. ◦ Do you feel your clothing on your body? ◦ Do you notice any sounds in the room?
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Pg 264 Free nerve endings Tactile (Meissner’s) corpuscles Lamellated (Pacinian) corpuscles
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Free nerves that respond to either warm or cold. ◦ Warm: >25 ° C (77 ° F) respond heavily >45 ° C (113 ° F) shut down Near 45 ° C = pain (burning) ◦ Cold: 10 ° C-20 ° C (50 °F -68 ° F) respond heavily <10 ° C (50 ° F) = pain (freezing) ◦ Adapt within about 1 minute of stimulation.
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Free nerve endings – stimulated by tissue damage. Mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors can also stimulate pain. They’re the only type of receptors in viscera that can ilicit a sensation. Adapt poorly.
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Nerve fibers: ◦ Acute pain fibers Myelinated Sharp pain Quits when stimulation stops ◦ Chronic pain fibers Unmyelinated Dull, aching sensation May continue after stimulation stops
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Awareness occurs when impulses reach the thalamus. Cerebral cortex determines intensity, location, emotions, motor response.
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Can feel like it’s coming from a different part of the body. Nerve pathways are similar.
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Smell – Taste – Hearing – Equilibrium – Sight -
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Both chemoreceptors. Both must be dissolved in fluid. Usually associated with one another because we do them at the same time.
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Receptors each respond to different smells, then stimulate an interpretation in the olfactory bulb of the brain.
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Taste buds are located within papillae. Modified epithelial cells act as receptors.
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Taste hairs portrude from openings called taste pores. Particles must be dissolved in fluid before they can be tasted.
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Five receptors ◦ Bitter ◦ Sweet ◦ Salty ◦ Sour ◦ Umami Nerve impulses travel to the medulla oblongata and parietal lobe of the cerebrum.
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Accommodation – adjustment of the lens shape to focus vision ◦ Done by the ciliary muscles and suspensory ligaments. Distance – lens is more flattened; ciliary muscles tense Close – lens is more convex; ciliary muscles more relaxed
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Photoreceptors (rods and cones) detect light. They are projected backward and upside- down onto the retina, then sent to the visual cortex. The visual cortex interprets the images so they are perceived correctly.
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1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
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Perilymph Membrane Endolymph Hair cells
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Hair cells bend causing a nerve impulse. Nerve impulses travel along the auditory nerve to the auditory cortices of the temporal lobes.
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Static – when you’re still ◦ Both are detected by shifting calcium carbonate grains in the semicircular canals of the inner ear. ◦ Sends messages to the brain, which sends messages back to muscles. Dynamic – when you’re moving ◦ Stimulates hair cells that send messages to the brain. Mechanoreceptors and sight can aid in equilibrium.
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