Sensory Systems : Sensory Systems Chapter 46
Sensory Systems : Sensory Systems All nerve impulses arrive to CNS as Action Potential
They reach different brain regions so different senses sensed
Intensity depends upon number of action potentials received.
Categories of Sensory Receptors : Categories of Sensory Receptors Sensory information is conveyed to the CNS and perceived in a four-step process.
3 Main Classes of Sensory Receptors : 3 Main Classes of Sensory Receptors Mechanoreceptors – Pressure, Gravity, Inertia, Sound, Touch, Vibration
Chemoreceptors – Taste,
Smell, Humidity
Photoreceptors – Light, Heat, Electricity, Magnetism
Categories of Sensory Receptors : Categories of Sensory Receptors Sensory receptors transduce stimuli into graded depolarizations which stimulates the production of action potentials.
Exteroceptors sense stimuli that arise in the external environment.
Interoceptors sense stimuli that arise from within the body.
Sensory Transduction : Sensory Transduction Sensory cells respond to stimuli because they possess stimulus-gated ion channels in their membranes.
Sensory stimulus produces a change in the membrane potential.
receptor potential
greater the sensory stimulus, the greater the depolarization of the receptor potential and higher frequency of action potentials
Events in Sensory Transduction : Events in Sensory Transduction
Slide8 : Cutaneous receptors
Thermoreceptors – naked dendritic nerve endings
Cold – stimulated by fall – inhibited by increase
Heat –
Nociceptors – transmit pain signal to brain
Some sense tissue damage others more sensitive
Mechanoreceptors – Fine touch – face and fingertips
hair follicle receptors - with hair
Meissner’s corpulse – no hair – fingers, palms, nipples
Ruffini endings - duration and extent of touch
Merkel cells - duration and extent
Pacinian Corpuscle – deep subcutaneous - pressure
Mechnoreceptors – measure force applied to membrane
Proprioreceptors – measure stretch – reflex Knee-jerk
Baroreceptors – measure stretch in arteries adjust B.P.
Muscle Spindle : Muscle Spindle
Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position : Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position Chemoreceptors contain membrane proteins that can bind to particular chemicals in the extracellular fluid.
Taste
Taste buds mediate taste in vertebrates.
located in epithelium of tongue and oral cavity within raised papillae
Taste : Taste
Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position : Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position Smell
Olfaction involves chemoreceptors located in the upper portion of the nasal passage.
New research suggests there may be as many as a thousand different genes coding for different receptor proteins for smell.
Internal chemoreceptors
detect variety of chemical characteristics of blood or fluid derived from blood
Smell : Smell
Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position : Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position Lateral line system
made up of sensory structures within a longitudinal canal in the fish’s skin
hairlike processes at their surface project into gelatinous membrane (cupula)
vibrations in the environment produce movements of the cupula, which cause hairs to bend
stimulates sensory neurons
Slide15 :
Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position : Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position Gravity and angular acceleration
statocyst – invertebrates generally consists of ciliated hair cells with the cilia embedded in a gelatinous membrane containing crystals of calcium carbonate
Cilia bend with change in position
Tilt to the right cilia on right side bend activate sensory neurons
Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position : In vertebrates – fluid filled membranous chamber – labyrinth = organ of equilibrium and hearing
Gravity receptors = two chambers utricle and saccule – possess hair cells similar to the lateral line system Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position
Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position : Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position Inner ear
Receptors consist of utricle and saccule.
hairlike processes embedded within a gelatinous membrane containing calcium carbonate crystal (otolith membrane)
utricle more sensitive to horizontal acceleration
saccule more sensitive to vertical acceleration
Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position : Sensing Taste, Smell, and Body Position Utricle and saccule are continuous, with three semicircular canals oriented in different planes. - Detect angular acceleration at any angle
ampullae - swollen chambers at end of canals
group of cilia protrude into ampullae
tips of cilia embedded within wedge of cupula that protrudes into the endolymph fluid of each semicircular canal
Utricle and Saccule : Utricle and Saccule
Structure of Semicircular Canals : Structure of Semicircular Canals
The Ears and Hearing : The Ears and Hearing Structure of the ear
In terrestrial vertebrates, vibrations in air may be channeled through the ear canal to the eardrum (tympanic membrane).
Vibrations of the tympanic membrane cause movement of three small bones (ossicles) in the middle ear.
malleus
incus
stapes
Slide23 : Middle
ear Inner
ear Outer ear Auditory canal Eustachian tube Pinna
Slide24 : Round
window Tympanic
membrane Malleus Stapes Semicircular
canals Auditory
nerve
to brain Oval
window Skull Incus Cochlea Eustachian tube
The Ears and Hearing : The Ears and Hearing The middle ear is connected to the throat by the Eustachian tube which equalizes the air pressure between the middle ear and the external environment.
Inner ear is composed of the cochlea.
The cochlear duct is located in the center of the cochlea.
The area above is the vestibular canal and the area below is the tympanic canal.
Slide26 : Vestibular
canal Auditory
nerve Organ of Corti Bone Cochlear
duct Tympanic
canal
The Ears and Hearing : The Ears and Hearing Transduction in the cochlea
bottom of the cochlear duct, basilar membrane, quite flexible and vibrates in response to pressure waves
cilia of sensory hair cells project into tectorial membrane
organ of Corti
cilia of hair cells bend in response to the movement of the basiliar membrane relative to the tectorial membrane
Slide28 : To auditory
nerve Sensory
neurons Hair cells Basilar
membrane Tectorial
membrane
The Ears and Hearing : The Ears and Hearing Frequency location in cochlea
When a sound wave enters the cochlea from the oval window, it initiates a traveling motion of the basilar membrane.
Flexibility of the basilar membrane limits the frequency range of human hearing to between approximately 20 and 20,000 cycles per second (in children).
Slide30 :
Slide31 : Vestibular canal Round
window Tympanic
membrane Malleus Incus Stapes Oval window High frequency (20,000Hz) Medium frequency (2000Hz) Low frequency (500Hz) Cochlear
duct Tympanic canal Apex Base Basilar
membrane
Sonar : Sonar Some mammals such as bats emit sounds and then determine the time it takes for the sound to return.
locate themselves in relation to other objects such as prey
Evolution of the Eye : Evolution of the Eye Structure of the vertebrate eye
sclera - white portion of the eye, formed of tough connective tissue
iris - colored portion of the eye
Contraction of the iris muscles in bright light decreases pupil size.
Evolution of the Eye : Evolution of the Eye Light enters the eye through a transparent cornea which begins to focus the light.
Light then passes through the pupil to the lens, a transparent structure that completes the focusing of light onto the retina.
lens attached by suspensory ligament to the ciliary muscles
Human Eye : Human Eye
Vertebrate Photoreceptors : Vertebrate Photoreceptors Vertebrate retina contains two photoreceptors.
rods - black and white vision
photopigment - rhodopsin
cones - sharpness and color vision
Both have an inner segment rich in mitochondria, with numerous vesicles filled with neurotransmitter molecules.
photopigment - photopsins
red, blue, and green cones
Color Vision : Color Vision
Vertebrate Photoreceptors : Vertebrate Photoreceptors Sensory transduction in photoreceptors
Inverse to the usual way stimuli are detected
In the dark, photoreceptors release inhibitory neurotransmitter the hyperpolarizes the neurons
Light inhibits the photoreceptors from releasing their inhibitory neurotransmitter, and thus stimulates the bipolar cells and the ganglion cells, which transmit action potentials to the brain.
Structure of the Retina : Structure of the Retina
Visual Processing in the Vertebrate Retina : Visual Processing in the Vertebrate Retina Action potentials propagated along the axons of ganglion cells are relayed through the lateral geniculate nuclei of the thalamus and projected to the occipital lobe of the cerebral cortex.
The brain interprets this information as light in a specific region of the eye’s receptive field.
Visual Processing in the Vertebrate Retina : Visual Processing in the Vertebrate Retina Color blindness
inherited lack of one or more types of cones
more common in men due to sex-linkage
Binocular vision
ability to perceive three-dimensional images and sense depth
each eye sees object at a slightly different angle
Pathway of Visual Information : Pathway of Visual Information
Diversity of Sensory Experiences : Diversity of Sensory Experiences Heat
pit vipers
Pits have membrane
that is warmed by
infrared radiation
stimulating
thermal receptors
Electricity
Elasmobranchs – ampullae of Lorenzini
Magnetism
eels, sharks, bees, and birds – navigate in magnetic field of earth
Slide44 :