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Sensory Systems Ch. 39. 6 Billion Worlds. Perception awareness of external and internal environments Every person’s perception of everything is a little unique We all vary in our sensory receptors, pathway processing, and application of stimuli
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6 Billion Worlds • Perception awareness of external and internal environments • Every person’s perception of everything is a little unique • We all vary in our sensory receptors, pathway processing, and application of stimuli • Sensory receptors cells designed to pick up stimulus within a receptive field (type and strength) • Stimuli can trigger a receptor potential which, when strong enough, will start an action potential along an afferent neuron (sensory transduction)
The Big Five • Most animals posses 5 types of sensory receptors: • Mechanoreceptors detect pressure and body movement; ears • Photoreceptors detect light; eyes • Chemoreceptors detect specific chemicals; taste buds • Thermoreceptors detect temperature; skin • Nociceptors detect damage; everywhere • Humans have about 15-20 senses: • Gravity, acceleration, balance, pH, O2and CO2 levels, time, etc…
Magnitude and Adaptation • Regardless of the sensory receptor, all action potentials are the same size. How do we measure the strength of a stimulus? • Frequency of action potentials; faster = stronger • Number of neurons stimulated; more= stronger • All sensory nerves, except nociceptors, will learn to ignore a stimulus if it remains at a constant strength for enough time (sensory adaptation) • Reason background noise is ignored or why you cant feel your clothing
Real Quick…. • Next Wednesday you will do a lab to test your sensory neurons • You will attempt to test how well they function under different stimuli and explain why they may fail you • As part of this lab I want each of you to design your own test to run • By Tuesday, design a sensory test your lab group will do and submit a brief outline • On Wednesday, make sure to bring the material needed to run your experiment. Bring extra material so other groups may also try your idea!
Mechanoreceptors: Touch • Touch receptors are located throughout the entire body • The higher the density of receptors the more sensitive an area is • What are the most sensitive parts of the body? • Fingers, lips, and tongue • 2-Point Test test sensitivity by measuring how far way two pins have to be for you to feel both independently • Hair follicles free nerve ends wrap around our body hair and react to movement of the hairs
Mechanoreceptors: Balance • 2 Resources: • Proprioceptors sensory neurons in muscle tissue that tell the brain about body position • Measure stretching, contractions, and increasing pressure • Golgi tendon organs monitor stretching of muscles at attachments to bones (tendons)
Mechanoreceptors: Balance 2) Vestibular apparatus 3 semicircular canals inside your ear that measure gravity and body movement • Ampulla (end of tube) is filled with sterocilia (sensitive hairs) and fluid (endolymph) • Movement in the head moves the fluid which pushes the hairs • Tubes follow X, Y, and Z axis to give us 3D feedback • Utricle and Saccule area of hair cells with CaCO3stones (otoliths) on tope • Pressure of otoliths tell us if we are upright
The Secret of Sound • Sound changes in air pressure caused by vibrations • Pitch depends on frequency • Amplitude (loudness) depends on size of change • Humans 20-20,000 hertz • Not all creatures hear through “ears” • Many invertebrates hear through skin • Insects hearing through exoskeleton or hair cells
Mechanoreceptors: Hearing • Human ear is made of 3 parts: • Outer ear part we can see; pinna (ear) funnels sounds into the auditory channel • Pressure pulls and pushes tympanic membrane (ear drum) 2) Middle ear air-filled cavity with three of our smallest bones which transfer tympanic vibrations to oval window (membrane of the inner ear) • Malleus hammer • Incus anvil • Stapes stirrup
Mechanoreceptors: Hearing 3) Inner ear fluid-filled cochlea (3.5 cm spiraled tube) transfer oval window vibrations into neuron impulses • Organ of Corti(spiral organ) contains sensory hair cells which react to fluid vibrations • Basilar membrane anchor for hair cells; wide at base and thinner at tip (oval window) • Thin area vibrates at high frequencies • Wide area vibrates at low frequencies • All hair cells send signals along cochlear nerve to the brain
The Mystical Eye • Ocellus simplest eye; detects lights but depolarizing when photopigments (retinal, made from vitamin A) absorb light • Compound eye thousands of units (ommatidia) focus light through transparent cells (cornea); great at detecting movement • Single-lens eye lens (cornea) focuses lights while muscles in pupil change its size (small in bright; large in dim); iris blocks light not hitting lens; retina react to light at the back of the eye • Accommodation changing lens to focus on objects
Photoreception: Sight • Human eye similar to single-lens eye; clear fluids (aqueous and vitreous humor) fill spaces in eyes and carry nutrients to cells • Why not blood vessels? • Limit our vision • Photoreceptors: • Rods rod shaped; specialized for low light; black and white; respond to a single photon of light • Cones cone shaped; specialized for wavelengths (color); less sensitive than rods • Ciliary body muscle tissue changes shape of lens (not pupil) to focus on objects
Rods and Cones • 120 million rods and 6 million cones • Fovea area at back of the eye where the lens focuses light; high conc. Of cones • Peripheral visioninput from area outside fovea; high conc. rods • Photoreception: • Outer membrane discs react to light • Internal segment processes cells activity • Axon of cell absorbs/releases glutamate to start impulse
Rods and Rhodopsin • Rhodopsin retinal protein in rods; part of G-protein pathway • Inactive (cis-form) releases glutamate into synapse • Active (trans-form) deceases glutamate release by closing Na+ channels and hyperpolarizing the cell • Rods work opposite of regular neurons; stimulation decreases neurotransmitter release
Vision and The Retina • 6 types of neurons make of the retina: 1 and 2) Rods and Cones 3) Bipolar cells send impulse from rods/cones to ganglion cells 4) Ganglion cells receive info from all over the retina and form optic nerve (blind spot) 5) Horizontal cells receive input laterally along excitation point 6) Amacrine cells send lateral information on to ganglions from bipolar cells • Lateral inhibition horizontal/amacinecells inhibit impulses outside area of light on retina; allow better detph
Cones and Color Vision • Most mammals have only 2 types of cones but humans/primates have 3 • Each type has a different photopsins(retinal + opsin proteins) • S-type 445nm (blue light) • M-type 535nm (green light) • L-type 570nm (red light) • All three have ranges that overlap so all visible light can be detected
Our Wonderful 3D World • 3D space comes from our brains receiving 2 sets of visual stimulus (2 eyes) • Optic chiasm part of image from left and right eye are shared but slightly different positions • Test this by altering which eye is open • Communication between each hemisphere in the brain allows the merging of the data to make 3D images • The greater the difference between data, the closer the object appears and the more 3D it is
Chemoreceptors: Taste • Taste is a crucial survival tool • Organisms taste through their mouth, feet, antenna, or even their whole body • Analyzing the chemical make of the material tells the organism the possible benefits or dangers of consuming it • 5 basic tastes: • Sweet sugars • Salty salts • Sour acids • Bitter bases and toxins • Umami protein (glutamate)
The Buds • Taste in many mammals comes from the tongue moist, enzyme recreating muscular tissue • Taste buds (papillae) chemoreceptors for the 5 tastes; react to specific chemicals • Salivary glands release a watery enzyme solution; used to help break down material and dissolve particles to be tasted • Taste leads to emotional responses due to connections with the limbic system
Chemoreceptors: Smell • Sent is a powerful communication method in many species • Small amount of particles are needed to get reactions • Easily dispersed by the wind • Pheromone communication through sent in insects/animals • Dead ants release a pheromone that tells other ants to remove its body • If pheromone sprayed on live ant, he will be kicked out of the colony (thought to be dead)
The Olfactory • Smell in humans is detected by olfactory bulbs in our nose • Directly linked to the brain…why? • Most mammals their nose comes first; faster the nose response the safer they are • Sensory hairs covered in mucus (help dissolve particles in air) react to different classes of chemicals • Taste and smell have a strong connection; often the smell of something is close to how you will taste it • Smell is our first memory maker; babies remember the smell of their parents months before their voice, touch, or even face
Nociceptors: Temperature • Thermoreceptors detect temperature in the environment and the body • Tool: infrared pit organs in snakes; find blood for mosquitoes • Safety: reflex protects us from damaging tissue • Homeostasis: hypothalamus regulates body temp.; causes sweating or shivering • Most mammals organize temps into groups from 8oCto 52oC
Nociceptors: Pain • Nociceptors are located throughout the entire body except the brain • Natural defense against tissue damage; pain stops our desire to continue a destructive act • 2 types of pain: • Glutamate-releasing cells sharp pain in specific areas • Substance-P releasing cells dull aching pain over a general area • Endorphins natural painkillers released by the CNS that limit Substance-P reaction
Supersenses: Magnetoreceptors and Electroreceptors • Magnetoreceptors detect the magnetic field of the Earth/magnetic material • Tool: used by migrating species to guide them across great distances • Field of the Earth varies in location but is relatively constant • Electroreceptors detect electrical fields • Passive Tool: used by sharks to locate prey in unclear water or under sand • Active Tool: attack prey with electrical impulse from glands; electric eel
Homework • Suggested Homework: • Test Your Knowledge • Actual Homework: • Discuss the Concepts #3 • Interpret the Data • Due Tuesday • Essay!!! • Explain a sense that humans do not possess (not magnetic or electroreception) • Citation and reference pages must be done correctly or you get a 0! • Due Tuesday • Test!! • Tuesday; Ch. 17, 37, 38, and 39