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Special Senses: Olfaction and Taste
Lab Exercise 26 Special Senses: Olfaction and Taste
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Objectives Olfactory epithelium Taste receptors Taste sensation
Location Cellular composition Taste receptors Structure, function Location on tongue Taste sensation 4 basic qualities Chemical substances that elicit them
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What is Olfaction? SMELL
Olfactory Epithelium (smell organ) Covers inferior surface of cribriform plate, superior perpendicular plate, & superior nasal conchae Fig. 17-1
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Cellular Composition Olfactory epithelium:
Olfactory receptor cells (ciliated) Supporting cells Basal (stem) cells Olfactory nerve fibers Fig. 17-1
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Sense of Taste Dorsal tongue’s surface covered with papillae (small projections)—3 types Taste buds (receptors) primarily on sides of ones at posterior tongue (“V”) and small ones all over mid-tongue Fig. 17-2
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Taste Buds (Receptors)
2 types of cells (epithelial) Gustatory (taste) cells—receptor cells, w/ microvilli Supporting cells Fig. 17-2
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Taste Buds (Receptors)
Nerve fibers enter each taste bud, to each taste cell Certain chemicals detected by microvilli “activate” the taste cell Fig. 17-2
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4 Primary Taste Sensations
Sour Acids Bitter Quinine, PTC Salty Salt, NaCl Sweet Sugars, saccharin, amino acids
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Plotting Taste? “No differences in the structure of the taste buds, and taste buds in all portions of the tongue provide all 4 primary taste sensations.” --Text, Martini “A single taste bud contains 50–100 taste cells representing all 5 taste sensations (so the classic textbook pictures showing separate taste areas on the tongue are wrong).” --
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