Download - Chapter 36 Sensory Reception.

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Page 1: Chapter 36 Sensory Reception.

Chapter 36Sensory

Reception

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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

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Sensory Pathways

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

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Sensory Adaptation

• Increase in frequency corresponds to increases in strength of stimulus

The effects of increases in stimulus strength

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Receptors Near the Body Surface

• Receptors in human skin

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I. Sense of Taste–Chemoreceptor–4 Sensations

•Sweet, sour, salty, bitter

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II. Sense of Smell

• Olfactory– Gases – Pheromones

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Try this one

Ok one more

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III. Components of the Human Ear

• External• Middle

– Stirrup– Anvil– Hammer

• Inner– Cochlea

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A. Sense of Balance

Location of Internal Ear in Human

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Sense of Balance

• Inner ear– Equilibrium– Fluid-filled sacs

• Vestibular apparatus– Hair cells– Otoliths– Linear Motion

• Semicircular canals– Rotational motion– Acceleration

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Inside a Human Ear

Sense of Balance

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B. Sense of Hearing

• Perception of Sounds

• Wavelength• Amplitude• Frequency

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Sensory Reception in the Human Ear

• Cochlea– Acoustical

receptors– Hair cells

• Sound reception

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

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• Another one?• Last one

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IV. Sense of Vision

A. Eyes– Photoreceptors

• Pigments– Simple Eyes

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B. Complex Eyes

• Developed eye– Lens– Cornea– Compound

• Photoreceptor

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1. Structure and Function of Vertebrate Eyes

• Outer layer– Sclera & Cornea

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

• Inner layer– Retina– Lens– Vitreous body

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2. Pattern of Retinal Stimulation

• Pattern– Upside-down and reversed left to right

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3. Focusing MechanismsVisual Accommodation

• Ciliary Muscle

Far objects

Near objects

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4. Organization of the Retina

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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

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Organization of Retina• Visual information

flows from photoreceptors to:

– Bipolar sensory neurons

– Ganglion cells– Horizontal cells – Amacrine cells

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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

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On to the Visual Cortex

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Disorders of the Human Eye

• Nearsighted vision– Focal point in in front of retina

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Disorders of the Human Eye

• Farsighted Vision– Focal point occurs behind the retina