Ch 16 Special Senses - Hearing, Taste, Vision Flashcards
taste chemoreceptors
chemicals dissolved in saliva
smell chemo receptors
chemicals dissolved in nasal fluids
taste buds
gustatory receptors
VII facial nerve
innervates anterior 2/3 of tongue
IX glossopharyngeal nerve
innervates posterior 1/3 of tongue
X vagus nerve
innervates oropharynx
what kind of receptors does the mouth contain
mechanoreceptors, thermoreciptors, and nociceptors
roof of nasal cavity contains this type of tissue
olfactory epithelium
how many different smells can humans distinguish
10000 odors from 100 receptors
olfactory receptor cells
filaments of olfactory nerve, synapse with olfactory bulb
accessory eye structures
eyebrows, eyelids, eyelashes, conjuctiva, lacrimal structures, extrinsic eye muscles
sclera
protects and shapes eye, provides anchor for eye muscles
cornea
anterior, clear; lets light in and bends light as it enters eye. many nerve endings, no blood or immune supply
outer layer of eye
sclera, cornea
middle layer of eye
choroid, ciliary body, iris, pupil
choroid
blood rich, brown appearance
ciliary body
smooth muscle surrounding lens, suspensory ligaments
iris
visible colored part, only brown pigments
pupil
allow light to enter eye
inner layer
retina, optic disc, macula lutea/fovea centralis
retina
contains photoreceptors rods and cones
rods - dim light and peripheral vision; black and white fuzzy images
cones - bright light and high acuity; color, sharp images
optic disc
where optic nerve exits eye
blind and weak spot - sclera can’t cover
macula lutea/fovea centralis
where lights hit eye most directly, most cones concentrated
lens
biconvex, clear, flexible, avascular
cataracts
clouding of lens, mostly from age, hardening and thickening of lens
internal chambers
anterior segment, posterior segment
anterior segment
holds aqueous humor, behind cornea in front of lens, aqueous humor regenerates and circulates
posterior segment
holds vitreous humor, behind lens, formed in embryo and lasts lifetime
glaucoma
aqueous humor drainage is blocked, pressure inside eye builds up, retina and optic nerve compressed, results in blindness unless detected early
astigmatism
unequal curves on lens or cornea, blurry images
light hits rods
low light excitation, crude visual perception, convergent pathways
light hits cones
high light excitation, high definition color vision, similar pigments as rods
what kind of potentials do photoreceptors generate
graded potentials
what kind of potentials do ganglion cells generate
action potentials
opsins
four versions of opsins w sensitivity to wave lengths of light
rhodopsin
purple light, highly sensitive to light found in rod cells
where are cones found
highly concentrated at the fovea and more dispersed around the retina
how much of the retina does the fovea make up
1% however over 50% of visual cortex is dedicated to interpreting sensations from this area