sensory physiology Flashcards

1
Q

initial interaction of stimulus (sensory) with receptor is…

A

TRANSDUCTION…which is the transformation of physical energy (outside stimulus) into a neuronal signal

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2
Q

the type of energy (stimulus) that a given receptor type is most sensitive to is called…

A

adequate stimulus

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3
Q

the sensory specificity of a receptor is due to

A

the limited sensitivity range of the receptor (can’t respond to many different types of stimuli)

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4
Q

what is the “law of specific nerve energies”

A

central connections (what system in the brain that the nerve is connected with) determine the modality (what you feel/see/etc)

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5
Q

what is a physical/direct interaction

A

stimulus interacts with membrane proteins which directly opens ion channels to trigger the signal

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6
Q

what sensory systems use physical/direct interaction

A

somatosensory, vestibular, auditory and taste

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7
Q

what is molecular interaction

A

stimulus interacts with a membrane protein (like g-protein) to trigger the signal

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8
Q

what sensory systems use molecular interaction

A

vision, taste, and olfaction

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9
Q

DIRECT transduction mechanism in the TASTE system for SALTY stimuli

A
  1. Na (salt) enters the cell through ENaCs (epithelial Na channels) which causes depolarization
  2. depolarization leads to an a.p which allows Ca2+ to enter (voltage gated channels) the taste receptor cell
  3. Ca2+ entry causes the release of ATP as an n.t
  4. ATP acts on the afferent nerve for a synapse–>salty sensation (gross)
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10
Q

MOLECULAR (g-protein coupled) TRANSDUCTION for SWEET stimuli

A
  1. sugars bind to a g-protein coupled receptor (on taste receptor cell)
  2. g-protein cascade leads to Ca release
  3. Ca acts as a second messenger to “gate” the TRPm5 channel
  4. now Na is allowed to enter the taste receptor cell
  5. Na entry leads to depolarization of the cell and then an a.p
  6. eventually this leads to ATP (the n.t) being released (to act on the afferent nerve and stimulate a “sweet sensation”)
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11
Q

what is a TRP channel

A

transient receptor potential receptor

  • they are a family of ion channels
  • composed of 6 transmembrane domains (channel is b/w 5th and 6th domains)
  • it is a CATION channel that can pass Ca2+
  • variety of mechanisms can cause these TRP channels to open (depending on the type of TRP…ex. TRPm5 opens via Ca)
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12
Q

how do neurons sense intensity

A

increase the intensity of the stimulus–> increase the receptor potential–> increases the # of a.ps

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13
Q

threshold is a function of the stimulus (eventually reach it as you increase the stimulus intensity). what else affects when you reach threshold

A

threshold can be affected by psychological, neurological, or pharmacological factors!

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14
Q

sensory afferent neurons with a smaller receptive field have ____ discrimination to location of stimulus than neurons with larger receptive fields

A

sensory afferent neurons with a smaller receptive field have GREATER DISCRIMINATION TO LOCATION OF STIMULUS than neurons with larger receptive fields

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15
Q

do you have “across neuron coding” for the olfactory sensation

A

no. individual smell/olfaction broadly tuned to SINGLE odors

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16
Q

what is lateral inhibition

A

in neurons with overlapping receptive fields, the afferent neuron that is closest to the stimulation can suppress the activity of the other afferent neurons that aren’t as close via a COLLATERAL inhibitory branch

17
Q

what is the benefit of lateral inhibition

A

better localization of signal/simuli location (gets rid of “noise”)

18
Q

how does a sensory neuron code for duration of a stimulus

A

can be either rapidly adapting or slowly adapting. when a neuron receives a stimulus it starts to fire a.ps at an elevated frequency. the neuron will eventually “get used to” a constant stimulus and the a.ps will stop. a rapidly adapting receptor will return back to a “baseline level” of a.ps faster than a slowly adapting receptor (aka duration of stimulus lasts longer with a slowly adapting receptors)

19
Q

how does the CNS modulate/regulate peripheral input

A

presynaptic inhibition and postsynaptic inhibition

20
Q

what is presynaptic inhibition

A

CNS inhibitory neuron synapses on the peripheral afferent neuron (before it has synapsed to send info to the CNS) to hyperpolarize the axon terminal and therefore inhibit the incoming stimulus. hyperpolarization leads to less Ca entry and less n.t release by the afferent neuron.

21
Q

what is postsynaptic inhibition

A

inhibitory CNS neurons interact/synapse after the peripheral synapse on the CNS afferent neuron to modulate the signal to the CNS. Therefore there is interaction b/w the EPSPs (from the PNS) and the IPSPs (from the CNS) to modulate the signal coming in. This includes temporal and spatial summation.