Senses: Chapter 10
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Transcript Senses: Chapter 10
Types of Receptors
Chemoreceptors
Respond to changes in chemical concentrations
Pain receptors
Respond to tissue damage
Thermoreceptors
Respond to temperature changes
Mechanoreceptors
Respond to changes in pressure or movement
Photoreceptors
Respond to light
Sensation and Projection
Brain:
Sensations come from here
Impulses are interpreted based on what area of
the brain they end up in
Brain projects the sensation back to the sensor so
the person feels the sensation at the sensor
Sensory Adaptation:
Ability of the PNS or CNS to block sensory
impulses that it deems unimportant or has
become used to
Somatic senses
Sensors are widely
spread throughout
body and are fairly
simple
Include:
Touch
Pressure
Temperature
Pain
Touch and Pressure
Three kinds of receptors
1) Free nerve endings
○ Sensations of touch and pressure
2) Meissner’s corpuscles
○ Provide sensations of light touch, usually
located in regoins of skin without hair
3) Pacinian corpuscles
○ Respond to heavy pressure, located in
deeper tissues
Temperature Receptors
Warm and cold receptors in skin
Free nerve endings
Receptors adapt very fast
Pain receptors
Extreme temperatures and injury stimulate
these
Pain Receptors
Sensations arise from free nerve ending
throughout body except brain
Pain receptors adapt poorly
Visceral pain
Refers pain to areas on the skin
Special senses
Sensations arise from specially adapted
sensors
Includes:
Smell
Taste
Hearing
Equilibrium
Sight
Smell
Olfactory receptors are located in small
patches along the roof of the nasal cavity
They are chemoreceptors
Incoming gases must dissolve in the mucous
covering the nasal cavity
Dissolved particles interact with the cilia
and may stimulate an action potential
Taste
Taste buds
Located primarily on tongue, although some
found on roof of mouth and sides of the throat
Each taste bud has many gustatory
receptors and tiny cilia projections
These are chemoreceptors
Incoming foods must be dissolved in saliva to be
tasted
Areas of the Tongue
Four main taste areas:
1. Sweet - concentrated on the tip of the tongue
2. Sour - concentrated along the margins of the
tongue
3. Bitter - concentrated along the back of the
tongue
4. Salty - spread throughout
The Outer Ear
Sound waves are directed into the ear by
the external auricle
They travel down the external acoustic
meatus
Bounce against tympanic membrane
(eardrum) and make the eardrum move
The Middle Ear
Occurs in the tympanic cavity
Has three small auditory ossicles/bones
Vibrations at the tympanic membrane cause
the three bones to vibrate
The final bone vibrates against the oval window
of the inner ear
The bones amplify the sound
Eustachian tube
Connects middle ear to throat, equalizes pressure for
eardrum, often where earaches occur
Inner Ear
Includes two labyrinths:
1) Osseous labyrinth - bony canals
2) Membranous labyrinth - membrane-bound tube
inside the bony canals
Perilymph separates the two
Endolymph is found inside the membranous labyrinth
Two parts to the labyrinth:
1) Semicircular canals - used in equilibrium
2) Cochlea – organ for hearing
Inner Ear (cont)
Vibrations at the oval window cause vibrations in
the perilymph of the scala vestibuli
Vibrations pass through vestibular membrane
into endolymph
Vibrations than pass through basilar membrane
to perilymph of scala tympani
Organ of Corti
Found in basilar membrane, contains hearing sensors
with hairs; vibrations cause hairs to move
Animation
Animation
Equilibrium
Two divisions:
1) Static Equilibrium - senses posture while at
rest
○ Occurs in vestibule
○ Position of head is determined by hairs on the
macula, hairs respond to shifting of otoliths
2) Dynamic Equilibrium – maintaining balance
during movement
○ Occurs in the semicircular canals, in particular
the ampulla
○ Movements cause the perilymph to stimulate
hairs in the ampulla
Sight
Visual receptors located in eye
Accessory organs aiding eye:
Eyelids
Lacrimal apparatus
○ Gland that produces tears to cleanse and protect
eye and ducts to carry the tears to the nasal cavity
Muscle
○ Moves the eye
The Eye
Posterior portion
Sclera
○ Tough fibrous covering
Choroid coat
○ Contains melanocytes to help darker the inside of
the eye
Retina
○ Thin complex inner layer that is continuous with the
optic nerve and contains the receptors
Vitreous humor
○ Jelly-like fluid filling internal eye
The Eye (cont)
Anterior portion
Cornea
○ Transparent covering
Aqueous humor
○ Fluid that is made between the iris and lens but can move to
between the cornea and the iris through the pupil
Iris
○ Pigmented layer containing smooth muscle to control size of
pupil
Lens
○ Layer that focuses the image on the retina; can change shape
to change focus
The Retina
Contains two types of receptors:
1) Rods
○ Black-and-white vision; more indistinct image; pigment is
rhodopsin
2) Cones
○ Color vision; refined image; pigments are sensitive to red,
green, and blue hues
Fovea centralis
Part of retina containing high concentration of cones; area
with sharpest focus
Optic disc
Area of retina with connection to optic nerve; lacks
receptors (blindspot)
Eye Dissection
Cow's Eye Dissection