Chapter 36 Sensory Reception.

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Sensory Receptors Mechanoreceptors Thermoreceptors Pressure, position, and acceleration Thermoreceptors Heat Pain Receptors (Nociceptors) Pain and tissue damage Chemoreceptors Chemical and pH changes in fluids Osmoreceptors Water volume Photoreceptors Visible and UV light

Transcript of Chapter 36 Sensory Reception.

Chapter 36Sensory

Reception

Sensory Receptors

• Mechanoreceptors– Pressure, position, and

acceleration

• Thermoreceptors– Heat

• Pain Receptors (Nociceptors)

– Pain and tissue damage

• Chemoreceptors– Chemical and pH

changes in fluids • Osmoreceptors

– Water volume

• Photoreceptors– Visible and UV light

Sensory Pathways

• Receptor endings of a sensory neuron are stimulated by stepping on a tack

Sensory Adaptation

• Increase in frequency corresponds to increases in strength of stimulus

The effects of increases in stimulus strength

Receptors Near the Body Surface

• Receptors in human skin

I. Sense of Taste–Chemoreceptor–4 Sensations

•Sweet, sour, salty, bitter

II. Sense of Smell

• Olfactory– Gases – Pheromones

Try this one

Ok one more

III. Components of the Human Ear

• External• Middle

– Stirrup– Anvil– Hammer

• Inner– Cochlea

A. Sense of Balance

Location of Internal Ear in Human

Sense of Balance

• Inner ear– Equilibrium– Fluid-filled sacs

• Vestibular apparatus– Hair cells– Otoliths– Linear Motion

• Semicircular canals– Rotational motion– Acceleration

Inside a Human Ear

Sense of Balance

B. Sense of Hearing

• Perception of Sounds

• Wavelength• Amplitude• Frequency

Sensory Reception in the Human Ear

• Cochlea– Acoustical

receptors– Hair cells

• Sound reception

C. Origin of Corti• Basilar membrane• Scala vestibuli• Scala tympani

• Another one?• Last one

IV. Sense of Vision

A. Eyes– Photoreceptors

• Pigments– Simple Eyes

B. Complex Eyes

• Developed eye– Lens– Cornea– Compound

• Photoreceptor

1. Structure and Function of Vertebrate Eyes

• Outer layer– Sclera & Cornea

• Middle layer– Choroid– Ciliary body– Iris & Pupil

• Inner layer– Retina– Lens– Vitreous body

2. Pattern of Retinal Stimulation

• Pattern– Upside-down and reversed left to right

3. Focusing MechanismsVisual Accommodation

• Ciliary Muscle

Far objects

Near objects

4. Organization of the Retina

Organization of the Retina• Rods

– Detect dim light– Rhodopsin

• Absorbs blue-to-green

• Cones– Detect bright light– Red, green, and blue

• Each with different pigment

Organization of Retina• Visual information

flows from photoreceptors to:

– Bipolar sensory neurons

– Ganglion cells– Horizontal cells – Amacrine cells

5. On to the Visual Cortex

• Right side of retina– Intercepts light from left half of visual field

• Left side of retina – Intercepts light from right half of visual field

• Optic Nerve - Signals from right visual field to left hemisphere, from left visual field to right hemisphere

On to the Visual Cortex

Disorders of the Human Eye

• Nearsighted vision– Focal point in in front of retina

Disorders of the Human Eye

• Farsighted Vision– Focal point occurs behind the retina