W6 - Sensory Input Flashcards

1
Q

Why are the 5 classic senses not well considered in physiology?

A

Some of these senses measure the same or multiple different stimuli (e.g. touch - pressure, temp and damage and hearing + taste - both chemical stimuli)

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2
Q

What is the definition of signal transduction?

A

The conversion of environmental factors into neural information (APs)

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3
Q

What are the 5 modalities?

A

Mechanoreception, thermoreception, photoreception, chemoreception and nociception

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4
Q

What are the 5 types of mechanoreception?

A

Pressure, body positioning, sound, acceleration and gravity

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5
Q

What does thermoreceptors detect? (e.g. sensors in HT, free nerve endings in skin)

A

Temperature

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6
Q

What do photoreceptors detect? (e.g. rod and cone cells)

A

Electromagnetic waves

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7
Q

What do chemoreceptors detect? (e.g. olfactory/gustatory receptors)

A

Specific chemicals

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8
Q

What does nociception detect? (NK1 receptors for substance P)

A

Cellular damage

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9
Q

Describe the two ways neurons are stimulated?

A

Directly - stimulus depolarises afferent neuron directly, Indirect - sensory cell (e.g. epithelial cell) is stimulated to release NTMs that stimulate the afferent neuron

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10
Q

What do pacinian corpuscles detect?

A

Vibration

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11
Q

Pressure in the form of high frequency waves deform the lamella and the dendrite, how does this cause depolarisation?

A

Opens stretch mediated Na+ channels

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12
Q

What 2 things do muscle spindles respond to and tell the brain of?

A

Muscle length and rate of change of length

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13
Q

Are pacinian corpuscles and muscle spindles directly or indirectly stimulated?

A

Directly

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14
Q

Hair cells are modified epithelial cells that help in hearing, what is the kinocilium and what does this link to?

A

Kinocilium - tallest cilium, links to stereocilium

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15
Q

When the kinocilium bends away/towards the stereocilia what happens?

A

Away from - K+ channels open, Towards - K+ channels closed

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16
Q

What is it that causes the movement of kinocilia?

A

Sound waves vibrate the tectorial membrane that causes them to bend

17
Q

There’s canals of extracellular gel that help to detect acceleration + gravity, what do the heavy otoliths do to detect gravity when the head tilts or acceleration as you move?

A

Pulls gel down or sideways, bending the hair cells’ kinocilium

18
Q

WHen muscle spindles shorten, does the AP frequency increase or decrease?

A

Decrease

19
Q

What is the example of neurons being indirectly stimulated?

A

Hearing using modified epithelial cells (hair cells)

20
Q

Are different receptors for touch all detecting the same thing?

A

No, the receptors are sensitive to only one modality

21
Q

Stimulus location says that…

A

A sensor should be able to determine the location of the stimulus

22
Q

What happens to the APs as the stimulus intensity increses?

A

APs get more frequent as you recruit more receptors

23
Q

Tonic receptors are ???? adapting receptors that respond for the ??????????????????

A

Slowly, duration of the stimulus

24
Q

Phasic receptors are ???? adapting receptors, how do they fire APs during a constant stimulus?

A

Quickly, they fire once at the beginning of the stimulus and then switch off, then fire again when the stimulus ends

25
Q

In the somatosensory system, areas of the brain are uniquely attributed to………..

A

Certain body areas (e.g. homunculus)