The Living World
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Transcript The Living World
Lecture 21
Major Senses
Sensory Perception
The sensory nervous system tells the central nervous system
what’s happenin’!
Sensory receptors
Specialized sensory cells
that detect changes
inside and outside the
body
Sensory organs
Complex sensory
receptors
Eyes, ears, taste buds
The path of sensory information
1. Stimulation
Physical stimulus activates a sensory receptor
2. Transduction
Converting the stimulus into an action potential
Stimulus-gated ion channels in sensory neuron are
opened or closed
An action potential is generated
3. Transmission
Nerve impulse is conducted to the CNS
Two main types of sensory receptors
Extroreceptors sense stimuli in external environment
Introreceptors sense stimuli in internal environment
Sensing the Internal Environment
Vertebrates use many different sensory receptors to
respond to changes in internal environment
Temperature Change
Two nerve endings in the skin
One stimulated by cold, the other by warmth
Blood chemistry
Receptors in arteries sense blood CO2 levels
Pain
Special nerve endings within tissues near the surface
Sensing Pressure & Strectch
Muscle contraction
Sensory receptors called
proprioceptors
embedded within muscle
& tendons sense stretch
of muscle
Touch
Pressure receptors
buried below skin
Blood pressure
Neurons called
baroreceptors in major
arteries
Sensing Chemicals: Taste
Taste
Taste buds are located
in raised areas called
papillae
Food chemicals dissolve
in saliva and contact the
taste cells
Sensing Chemicals: Smell
Smell
Olfactory receptor cells are
embedded in the epithelium of the
nasal passage
These are far more sensitive in
dogs than in humans
Evolution of Balance & Hearing
Lateral Line and the fish’s sense of
hearing
Fish are able to sense objects
that reflect pressure waves and
low-frequency vibrations
The system consists of canals
running the length of the fish’s body
under the skin
Canals have sensory structures
containing hair cells projecting
into a gelatinous cupula
Vibrations produce movements
of the cupula
Hair cells bend and depolarize
associated sensory neurons
Human Sensation of Gravity and Motion
Receptors in the ear
inform the brain where
the body is in three
dimensions
Balance
Gravity is detected by shifting of
otolith sensory receptors
These are located in a
gelatin-like matrix in the
utricle and saccule
chambers of the inner ear
Motion
Motion is detected by the deflection of hair cells by fluid in a
direction opposite to that of motion
These hair cells are found in the cupula, tent-like assemblies in
the three semicircular canals
Properties of Sound
Sound is:
A pressure disturbance (alternating areas of high and low pressure)
originating from a vibrating object
Composed of areas of rarefaction and compression
Represented by a sine wave in wavelength, frequency, and amplitude
Frequency – the number of waves that pass a given point in a given time
Pitch – perception of different frequencies (we hear from 20–20,000 Hz)
Amplitude – intensity of a sound measured in decibels (dB)
Loudness – subjective interpretation of sound intensity
Sensing Sounds: Hearing
When a sound is heard, air
vibration is detected
Eardrum membrane is pushed
in and out by waves of air
pressure
Three small bones (ossicles)
located on other side of
eardrum increase the vibration
force
Amplified vibration is
transferred to fluid within the
inner ear
Inner ear chamber is shaped
like a tightly coiled snail shell
and is called cochlea
Sensing Sounds: Hearing
Cochlea are hair cells that rest on
a membrane running up and
down the chamber
They are covered by another
membrane
Sound waves entering the
cochlea cause this membrane
“sandwich” to vibrate
Bent hair cells send nerve
impulses to brain
Pitch is determined by different
frequencies causing different
parts of the membrane to vibrate
Different sensory neurons are
fired
Sound intensity is determined by
how often the neurons fire
PLAY
Transduction of Sound Waves
The Evolution of Vision
Vision begins with the capture of light
energy by photoreceptors
Many invertebrates have simple
visual systems
Photoreceptors are clustered in an
eyespot
Perceive light direction but not a
visual image
Members of four phyla have evolved well-developed, image-forming eyes
Annelids
Mollusks
Arthropods
Vertebrates
The eyes are strikingly similar in structure but are believed to have
evolved independently
Eyes in Three Phyla of Animals
Structure of the Vertebrate Eye
The vertebrate eye works like a lens-focused camera
Cornea – Transparent covering that
focuses light
Lens – Completes the focusing
Ciliary muscles – Change the shape of
the lens
Iris – Shutter that controls amount of
light
Pupil – Transparent zone
Retina – The back surface of the eye
Contains two types of
photoreceptors: rods and cones
Fovea – Center of retina
Produces the sharpest image
How Rods and Cones Work
Rods are extremely sensitive
to dim light
Cannot distinguish colors
Do not detect edges
Produce poorly defined
images
Cones can detect color
Detect edges well
Produce sharp images
How Light is Converted to a Nerve Impulse
Pigment in rods and cones are made from carotenoids
cis-retinal is attached to a protein called opsin
This light-gathering complex is called rhodopsin
When light is absorbed by
cis-retinal, it changes shape
to trans-retinal
This induces a change in the
shape of the opsin protein
A signal-transduction
pathway is initiated leading
to generation of a nerve
impulse
Color Vision
Three kinds of cone cells exist, each with its own opsin type
Differences in opsin shape, affect the flexibility of the attached cisretinal
This shifts the
wavelength at which it
absorbs light
420 nm – Blue
530 nm – Green
560 nm – Red
Colorblindness
Colorblindness is a condition in which a person cannot see
all three colors
Caused by a lack of
one or more types of
cones
It is inherited as a
sex-linked trait and is
more likely to affect
males
Conveying the Light Information to the Brain
Rods and cones are at
the rear of the retina,
not front!
Light passes through
four types of cells
before it reaches them
Photoreceptor
activation stimulates
bipolar cells, and then
ganglion cells
Nerve impulse travels
through the optic nerve
to the cerebral cortex
Focusing the Eye
Focusing for Distant Vision:
Light from a distance needs little
adjustment for proper focusing
Far point of vision – the distance
beyond which the lens does not
need to change shape to focus (20
ft.)
Focusing for Close Vision:
Accommodation – changing the
lens shape by ciliary muscles to
increase refractory power
Constriction – the pupillary reflex
constricts the pupils to prevent
divergent light rays from entering
the eye
Convergence – medial rotation of
the eyeballs toward the object
being viewed
Problems of Refraction
Normal eye (Emmetropic) – with light focused properly
Nearsighted (Myopic) – the focal point is in front of the retina
Corrected with a concave lens
Farsighted (Hyperopic) – the focal point is behind the retina
Corrected with a convex lens
Muscles That Move the Eye
Six strap-like extrinsic eye muscles
Enable the eye to follow moving objects
Maintain the shape of the eyeball
Four rectus muscles originate from the annular ring
Two oblique muscles move the eye in the vertical plane
Binocular Vision
Primates and most predators
have eyes on front of the head
The two fields of vision overlap
allowing the perception of 3-D
images and depth
Prey animals generally have eyes
located on sides of the head
This prevents binocular vision but
enlarges the perceptive field
Lacrimal Apparatus
Consists of the lacrimal gland
and associated ducts
Lacrimal glands secrete tears
Tears
Contain mucus, antibodies,
and lysozyme
Enter the eye via lacrimal
excretory ducts
Exit the eye medially via the
lacrimal punctum & lacrimal
canal
Drain into the nasolacrimal
duct
Other Types of Sensory Reception
Heat
Pit vipers can locate warm
prey, using infrared radiation
Heat-detecting pit organs
Electricity
Used by aquatic
vertebrates to
locate prey and
mates
Magnetism
Eels, sharks and many birds
orient themselves in relation
to the Earth’s magnetic field