2 - Other Senses Flashcards

1
Q

Smell

A
  • chemoreceptors in nose in BACK of nasal cavity
  • volatile/aerosolized compounds / noxious chemicals bind to olfactory chemoreceptors/nerves in olfactory epithelium in upper nasal cavity
  • many kinds of chemoreceptors

-signal to HIPPOCAMPUS, not thalamus!

  • signal to olfactory bulb in back of midbrain, which projects via olfactory tract into limbic system/hippocampus (memory; hence we get memories when we smell things)
  • olfactory bulb does sensory processing
  • Smell- interpersonal signals- pheromones- animal social/foraging/sexual behavior —perfume
  • Expt- men sweaty T-shirts- women like smell of their s/o’s shirt, esp when they’re ovulating
  • The way you smell signals something about immune system- slightly/optimally different from yours- diversity in offspring immunity (pheromone theory of attraction)
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2
Q

Taste

A

Flavor: Salt, Sweet, Sour, Bitter, Umami/savory- meat/Glutamate

Flavor is a combo of smell and taste
smell is stronger than taste

-response to taste is hardwired genetically (Baby eating lemon = ew)

  • taste chemoreceptors respond to dissolved molecules in saliva
  • receptors = taste buds, in papillae (bumps on tongue)
  • all taste buds for all tastes spread throughout tongue
  • no location of receptors / map corresponding to location of smell/taste
  • you have taste receptors in palate and back of mouth so you can still taste w/o your tongue (but most on tongue)
  • info to thalamus then higher-order brain regions
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3
Q

Touch = Somatosensation

A

Touch = somatosensation

4 modalities / things we can sense in terms of touch:

  • Pressure
  • Vibration
  • Pain - nociceptors
  • Temperature - thermoreceptors

Pressure and vibration:

  • Pacinian corpuscles: deep pressure / vibrations
  • Meissner - light touch
  • Merkle discs - deep pressure & texture
  • Ruffinian endings - stretch
  • Free nerve endings = pain and temp
  • To thalamus, then parietal lobe’s somatosensory cortex
  • gate theory of pain
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4
Q

Touch perception: 2 point threshold

A

Two-point threshold - how far apart 2 stimuli have to be in order to determine there are 2 stimuli and not just one

  • smallest 2-pt threshold: TONGUE - 1.1 mm difference, then fingertips/hands, then face
  • largest: back/shoulders- takes 3-8 cm
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5
Q

Physiological Zero

A

Temp of outside env that feels neutral
anything warmer feels hot, anything cooler feels cold

Pools:)

Skin normally 90 degrees (86-97)
-can change w/ adaptation, up or down

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6
Q

Gate theory of pain

A
  • When pain signal down spinal column, spinal column only lets so much signal through
  • pain sensation nociceptor to spinal column at a small nerve fiber
  • Other sensations: larger nerve fibers in spinal cord
  • When you get enough sensation from large nerve fibers in spinal cord, it shuts the gate of smaller nerve fibers = experience lesser pain
  • rub affected area / confuse nerve cells b/c nerve fibers larger than pain ones so shut down pain sensation, feel touch instread
  • kids- bump head, kiss forehead- same thing
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7
Q

Kinesthetic sense = proprioception

A

-where’s your body at
-receptors at muscles and joints
-nerve cells signal your brain where your limbs are
(vestibular in ear = head)
=you can tell where your limbs are even if you close your eyes

Deafferentiated limbs doesn’t disrupt kinesthetic sense but makes it not want to be moved
-sleep on arm wrong - hard to move arm = arm is heavy

-hand-eye coordination, balance, mobility

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8
Q

SEE YOUR NOTES FROM MAMM PHYS

A

plz :)

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