cutaneous pt 2 Flashcards

1
Q

how do we perceive objects- haptic perception

A
  • humans use active touch to interact with environment
    exploration of 3D objects with hands using:
    1. sensory system
    2. motor system
    3. cognitive system
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2
Q

4 exploratory procedures (EPs)

A
  • lateral motion
  • pressure
  • enclosure
  • contour following
    takes 1-2 seconds
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3
Q

somatosensory center-surround receptive fields

A

lateral inhibition and center-surround receptive field

  • excited by neuron above it and inhibited by neuron beside it
  • becomes more clear precisely where stimulus came from
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4
Q

feature detectors and tuning curves

A

orientation feature detectors built from simpler detectors

- horizontal/vertical bar detectors

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5
Q

complex feature detectors in S1

A

motion sensitive- respond to any motion in field
orientation sensitive- respond to motion along particular axis
direction sensitive- respond to motion in a particular direction

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6
Q

3 types of physical pain

A
  1. inflammatory pain: from joints
  2. neuropathic pain: nerve pinched
  3. nociceptive pain: pain receptors on skin activated
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7
Q

sensory vs affective pain

A

sensory - intensity of pain
ex. sharp, dull, prickly
affective- unpleasentness of pain
ex. sickening, terrifying, annoying

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8
Q

direct pathway model of pain

A

pain is due to nociceptor activation

signals sent directly from skin to brain

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9
Q

issues with direct pathway model

A
  • soldeirs often experience little to no pain despite serious injuries
  • phantom limb phenomenon
  • placebo vs nocebo effect
    experiencing pain does not always correlate with physical damage
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10
Q

gate control model of pain

A

nociceptor –> spinal cord –> brain

additional pathways control a gate in spinal cord

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11
Q

3 pathways for gate control

A

nociceptors: activate excitatory synapse to open gate
mechanoreceptors: activate inhibitory synapse to close the gate
central control: top-down cognitive input to open or close the gate

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12
Q

3 top down moderators of pain perception

A
  1. expectations: placebo and nocebo
  2. attention: distraction and mindfullness
  3. emotions: pleasant music/ images
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13
Q

attention and pain

A

pain can be moderated by attention

- if youre not aware it isnt much of a problem

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14
Q

mindufllness and pain

A

focused attention, open monitoring and acceptance
- not distraction
found to reduce high and low pain

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15
Q

emotions and pain

A

looking at positive pictures can reduce the experience of pain
- listening to pleasant music can reduce pain

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16
Q

pain areas in the brain

A
primary somatosensory
anterior cingulate
prefrontal cortex
thalamus
insula
17
Q

sensory and affective components

A

affective: anterior cingulate, insula
sensory: prefrontal cortex, somatosensory 1 and 2

18
Q

opiods and pain

A

analgesic effect

  • brain has receptor sites for opiods
  • naturally occuring opiods are endorphins
19
Q

nalaxone

A

similar structure to opioids

  • blocks receptor sites
  • treats opiod overdoses
  • increases pain because receptors cannot function as they normally would
20
Q

social pain

A

we feel pain when we observe pain in others
- empathy in ACC and insula
see increased ACC activation with rejection

21
Q

physical- social pain overlap hypothesis

A
  • physical and social pain share some of the same brain networks
  • support: painkillers reduce hurt feelings and pain
  • counter evidence: different ACC activations for physical and social pain