physiology of hearing, balance and vision Flashcards

1
Q

what cells are involved in the direct (vertical) pathway for signal transmission

A

ganglion cells, bipolar cells and phtoreceptors

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2
Q

what do lateral connections influence

A

signal processing

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3
Q

what do horizontal cells receive input from

A

photoreceptros and project to other photoreceptors and bipolar cells

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4
Q

what do photoreceptors do

A

convert electromagnetic radiation to neural signals-TRANSDUCTION

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5
Q

what are the 4 main regions

A

outer segment
inner segment
cell body
synaptic terminal

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6
Q

in what region of the photoreceptor is the photopigment found

A

in membranous discs in the outer segment

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7
Q

what happens in the light to the Vm and why

A

with light exposure, Vm hyperpolarises
this positive Vm is because of the ‘dark current’. A cGMP hated Na+ channel that is open in the dark and closes in the light

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8
Q

explain what happens in response to light

A

Pna is reduced (outer segment channels close)
Pk>PNa
therefore Vm-EK hyperpolarises
change is local and graded

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9
Q

what does light do to 11-cis retinal

A

converts it to trans retinal

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10
Q

which is the activated form cis or trans retinal

A

trans retinal is the activated form

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11
Q

in the dark is there more or less glutamate

A

MORE GLUTAMATE IN THE DARK

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12
Q

WHAT HAPPENS TO THE ROD IN DARKNESS

A

inactivate rhodopsin, cAMP levels high
membrane potential in dark -40mv
tonic release of neurotransmitter onto bipolar neurones

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13
Q

rod in light

A
rhodopsin bleaching 
opsin (bleached pigment)
Na channel closes 
membrane hyperpolarises to -70mV
neurotransmitter release decrease in proportion to amount of light
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14
Q

what allows for visual acuity

A

photoreceptor spacing

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15
Q

what colour are the short wavelength cones

A

blue

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16
Q

red represents what length of wavelength

A

long

17
Q

what colour are medium wavelength cones

A

green

18
Q

what colour are long wavelength ones

A

red

19
Q

what does lateral inhibition do

A

exaggerates the difference in stimulus intensity detected by adjacent neurons

20
Q

what does lateral inhibition aid with

A

LOCALIZATION

21
Q

what does on centre mean

A

off surround

22
Q

off centre

A

on surround

23
Q

what does centre surround organisation/lateral inhibition serve to do

A

emphasise areas of difference (contrast) ie it sharpens the boundary between objects of different luminance

24
Q

where are segregation of cells representing movement and form

A

LGN and VI

25
Q

what is about halg of the visual cortex dedicated to info from

A

the fovea

26
Q

what does magnocellular LGN project form which layer

A

IVCa

27
Q

what does parvocellular LGN neurons project to which layer

A

IVCb

28
Q

what does koniocellular LGN axons project to

A

by passes layer IV to make synapses in II and III

29
Q

what is the competition hypothesis

A

connections from the 2 eye compete with each other in cortex

retinal synapses in LGN are not affected by deprivation because they are monocularr

30
Q

in the cortex monocular deprivation during a critical period results in what

A

active afferents from one eye and lower activity from the other eye