Sensory and Motor Systems
Download
Report
Transcript Sensory and Motor Systems
Sensory and Motor
Systems
Psychology 2617
Introduction
The nervous system basically goes
sensory -> inter -> motor neurons
You convert energy from the environment
to energy in your nervous system
This is called transduction
Agnosia
Somatosensory systems
Where your body is, what its state is
Proprioception
Mechanical receptors
Chemoreceptors
Thermoreceptors
Nociceptors
Wired contralaterally
Ascending spinal thalamic tract
Dorsal column medial lemniscal pathway
Pain and temperature
Goes through medial lemniscus to medula ->
pons -> midbrain -> thalamus -> cortex
So again, the thalamus is a sensory
clearinghouse or switchboard or whatever
Somatosensory cortex
Parietal
Can look at it with a
sensory homunculus
So much more
sensory data from
more enervated
areas, so more
cortical processing
power needed
Chemical senses
Is taste the five types of basic tastes, or is
it a pattern?
Fine question….
Cranial nerves to brainstem (medulla)
Evolutionarily sensible
Smell does not go to the thalamus!
Goes to the olfactory bulb
Goes to the limbic system, amygdila and
Hp
Smell and emotion?
Well many people say this
There is not a whole bunch of data
Smell disorders do happen though
Vision
Basically, it all goes to V1 – V5 in occipital
lobe
Won’t dwell on this as we did lots last term
Book does a decent job anyway
Blindsight
Neglect
Audition
Hairlike receptors to
detect frequency
Temporal lobe
Heschl’s gyrus
Frequency bands
Not quite as rigid as
the visual system but
some bands are more
sensitive to certain
frequencies
Speech and lingo
Heschl’s -> Wernicke’s
Makes sense of speech
Now other cortical areas are needed to
interpret meaning
Wernicke’s aphasia
Left meaning
Right, intent
Broca’s for speaking
This is cool
People that use ASL as their first language
use Broca’s and Wernicke’s as we do!
So they are not necessarily for say
auditory processing
They are for language
Only we have ‘em
Motor systems
Primary motor does
fine detail of
movement
Secondary motor
does organization and
timing of movement
Disocciable
Cingulate motor area
P300
Subcortical motor processing
Basal ganglia and cerebellum, automatic
Parkinson’s disease and substantia negra
of the basal ganglia
Huntington’s affects the cuadate, jerky
movement
conclusions
This is just a taste
This stuff is very complex
May be where ‘consciousness’ comes
from
Disorders are possible, more on that later