Week 14 Flashcards

1
Q

Dolarimeter

A

Focused beam of light that caused pain- can quantify/control. Other methods include putting hand in bucket of ice water

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2
Q

Pain adaptation

A

Varies with intensity of painful stimulus. Weber’s function:4%. M=3.5 for scaling (dol scale)

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3
Q

Placebo effect

A

fMRI imaging studies show placebos decrease brain activity in pain sensitive areas of brain including thalamus, insult, and anterior cingulate cortex

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4
Q

Psychological pain

A

“Pain” associated with social rejection. fMRI studies show that human brain area “light up” for physical pain (anterior cingulate) is activated by social loss. More social distress, more strongly anterior cingulate activated. Activity in prefrontal cortex linked to low social distress

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5
Q

Papillae

A

Bumps on tongue that contain taste buds

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6
Q

Taste buds of papillae

A

Fungi form, foliate, circumvallate, filiform

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7
Q

Taste

A

Goes through microvilli in tongue pores in taste buds in papilla

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8
Q

Salt

A

Opens up channels on microvilli

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9
Q

Sweet, bitter, umami

A

Sends G protein to send signal to open channels

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10
Q

Taste receptors front to back

A

Fungi form, foliate, circumvallate

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11
Q

Order

A

Tongue, thalamus, orbitofrontal cortex

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12
Q

Neuronal transmission

A

Salts directly depolarize gustatory cells by opening

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13
Q

How do neurons encode taste info?

A

Taste intensity related to rate of neuronal firing (logarithmic). Taste quality signaled by primary divers (labeled line). Some respond to everything (across taste)

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14
Q

Taste thresholds

A

Affected by concentration of solution, temp, viscosity, state of tongue

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15
Q

Taste adaptation

A

Tongue quickly adapts to taste substances and this can raise threshold

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16
Q

Self adaptation

A

Prior exposure to a taste raises threshold for subsequent exposure to that taste.

17
Q

Cross-adaptation

A

Prior exposure to a taste raises threshold to subsequent exposure of a different taste, but only to extent that 2 tastes are chemically similar

18
Q

Potentiation

A

Prior exposure ton1 taste primary can lower threshold to subsequent primary. Sweet things enhance sourness of sour things

19
Q

Taste adaptation

A

Neural phenomenon

20
Q

Taste discrimination

A

Not good. Webers function is high (0.1-1.0) and variable. Even worse in elderly

21
Q

Taste scaling

A

Magnitude estimation is fairly accurate for most primaries (n=1) but testing conditions and adaptation play big role. Multidimensional scaling is useful for describing complex food tastes

22
Q

Olfactory epithelium

A

Smell receptor

23
Q

Orthonasal olfaction

A

Comes in through nose

24
Q

Retronasal olfaction

A

Comes in through mouth

25
Q

Smell stimuli

A

Volatile (air-based) chemicals

26
Q

Smell receptors

A

Located in olfactory epithelium

27
Q

Olfactory rod

A

Contains over 1000 different odor receptors on mammalian cilia membranes. Sensitivity determined by density of rods per unit area

28
Q

Olfactory pathways

A

Fibers from rods, olfactory bulbs. Signal processes to glomeria

29
Q

Anosmia

A

Smell blindness

30
Q

Adaptation

A

Discrimination:k=5%. JND

Scaling (m=.15-.70

31
Q

Smell receptor

A

Vomeronasal organ

32
Q

Pheromones

A

Chemical substances secreted outside the organism and received by another organism

33
Q

Primers

A

Change physiological state: slow

34
Q

Releasers

A

Elicit overt behavior:immediate

35
Q

Signallers

A

Convey inform about senders, including individual/group identity

36
Q

Modulators

A

Affect mood and thought processes

37
Q

Pain threshold

A

“Pain points” are receptive fields on skin for pain receptors