37. Sense Organs Flashcards

1
Q

How do sensory receptor types vary?

A

By modality (what they react to), by distribution, and by origin of stimuli (internal/external)

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2
Q

Where are special sense receptors located?

Where are general sense receptors located?

A

In the head

Widely distributed, may be clustered in areas

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3
Q

How do sensory receptors transduce stimuli into potentials?

A

Through the opening of ion-gated channels

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4
Q

What is the concept of graded potentials?

A

The magnitude of the receptor potential varies with the strength of the stimulus

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5
Q

How is stimulus intensity encoded?

How is stimulus duration encoded?

A

Number of receptors activated and rate of APs

Duration of APs in sensory neurons

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6
Q

How do special sense receptors differ structurally from general sense receptors?

A

Synapse on ganglion cells, have high specificity

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7
Q

Which sensory systems axons do not decussate?

A

Olfactory and gustative systems

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8
Q

What is the purpose of the thalamus in the role of special senses?

A

Serves as a sensory relay, sends to different parts of cortex for processing

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9
Q

What areas of the body experience sensory magnification?

A

Mouth, tongue, tip of index finger

Fovea of eye

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10
Q

What are olfactory receptors?

A

Bipolar neurons

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11
Q

What is the organisation of olfactory receptor cells?

A

Randomly distributed in nasal mucosa, multiple cells synapse only the same glomeruli in the olfactory bulb

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12
Q

How do odorant molecules stimulate the olfactory sense?

A

Bind to G protein on cilia, depolarises cell and sends AP to olfactory bulb

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13
Q

What is the purpose of mitral cells in the olfactory bulb?

A

Forward the signal from olfactory receptor cells to the primary olfactory cortex

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14
Q

What is cranial nerve I?

A

Olfactory nerve

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15
Q

Which structures make up the primary olfactory cortex?

A

Piriform, enthorinal cortex, amygdala

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16
Q

What is the purpose of the orbitofrontal cortex?

A

Associate olfactory info with gustatory info

17
Q

How many receptor cells make up a taste bud?

A

50-150, plus support cells

18
Q

How are different tastes sensed?

A

Each has its own receptors based on shape and ion charges

19
Q

Where is flavour integrated?

Where is this information sent?

A

Secondary gustatory cortex

Hypothalamus and amygdala

20
Q

Where do the taste receptors send signals to?

A

The gustatory nucleus in the brain stem, onto the thalamus

21
Q

Which photopigments are contained in rods?

Which photopigments are contained in cones?

A

Rhodopsin

Opsin

22
Q

What type of vision are rods responsible for?

Where are they located?

A

Low light/night vision and grey shades

Located peripherally in the retina

23
Q

Why are photoreceptors hyperpolarised by light?

A

Reduces noise in the final image

24
Q

How are neurons arranged in the retina?

A

Photoreceptors - bipolar cells - retinal ganglion cells

25
Q

Which cells send APs along the optic nerve?

A

Retinal ganglion cells only

26
Q

Which structures receive visual information?

A

Primary visual cortex - through the LGN
Superior colliuculus - control of eye movements, coordination with auditory info
Suprachiasmatic nucleus - control of body clock and circadian rhythms

27
Q

Which optical fibres decussate?

A

Half of the fibres coming from one eye decussate at the optic chiasm, and project in the contralateral LGN. The other half remain ipsilateral

28
Q

Which type of receptors detect auditory stimuli?

A

Mechanoreceptors (hair cells)

29
Q

How are sound waves transduced in the ear?

A

Distortion of the basilar membrane causes stereocilia of the hair cells to bend and discharge APs

30
Q

How are different frequencies of sound differentiated?

A

Different regions of the basilar membrane vibrate for different frequencies

31
Q

How are APs transmitted from the cochlea to the brain?

A

Vestibulocochlear nerve (CN-VIII) sends to cochlear nucleus, send to inferior colliculus then thalamus, then auditory cortex

32
Q

What region of the cochlea do low frequency sounds vibrate?

A

The inner spiral

33
Q

Where are high frequency sounds processed in the auditory cortex?

A

Deeper into the brain, further from the skull

34
Q

How is head position sensed?

How is head motion sensed?

A

Utricle and saccule

Semi-circular canals

35
Q

What type of motion do saccule and utricle respond to?

A

Acceleration in a straight line, ie gravity

36
Q

What are contained within the saccule and utricle?

A

Otoliths which displace the gelatine and bend stereocilia

37
Q

What is contained within the semi-circular canals?

A

Hair cells in a gelatinous cup which shifts due to angular acceleration or deceleration

38
Q

How are different directions of head rotation transduced?

A

One direction causes excitation of nerve, many APs, and the other direction causes inhibition, firing less APs

39
Q

Where are vestibular info projected to?

A

The vestibular nucleus in the brainstem, into spinal cord, cerebellum, superior colliculus, and primary somatosensory cortex