Exam 2-General Sensory Process Flashcards

1
Q

sensation

A

refers to the actual stimulus received by the body

results in action potentials in afferent neurons

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2
Q

perception

A

refers to brain’s understanding of the stimulus (even just being aware)
*shaped by brain processing, personality, experience, mood

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3
Q

(Receptor Encoding)

Stimulus Modality

A

proprioception, temperature, vision, pressure, taste, osmolarity, hearing, olfaction, pain

  • submodality
  • principle of labeled lines: each receptor, when stimulated, gives rise to one sensation (each receptor sensitive to a modality and a modality with in modality)
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4
Q

(Receptor Encoding)

Stimulus Intensity

A

-indicated by increase in number of action potentials
(increase firing by single neuron)
(increase number of neurons firing: recruitment)
(some neurons have differing thresholds)

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5
Q

(Receptor Encoding)
Stimulus Temporality
(tonic)

A

tonic receptors: slow adapting; continue to generate AP throughout stimulus period; convey info about both intensity and duration (want info constantly)

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6
Q

(Receptor Encoding)
Stimulus Temporality
(phasic)

A

phasic receptors: rapidly adapting; only generate AP at onset (maybe offset) of a stimulus; convey info about change in stimulus intensity

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7
Q

(Receptor Encoding)

Stimulus Location

A
  • exoreceptors: interested in world around us (contact vs. distance)
  • interoceptors: internally interested (often subconsious)
  • proprioceptors: how the body is in relationship to the world around us
  • acuity: ability to discriminate between location of simultaneous stimuli
  • receptive fields: region of receptor surface that corresponds to a single neuron
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8
Q

(touch)

mechanoreceptors

A

stretch-activated ion channels

send info to primary somatic sensory cortex

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9
Q

(touch receptors)

Meissner’s corpuscle

A
  • phasic, superficial skin
  • responds to light touch (beginning/end)
  • constantly sending info when vibration
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10
Q

(touch receptors)

merkle’s corpuscle

A
  • tonic, superficial

- light touch

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11
Q

(touch receptors)

pacinian corpuscle

A
  • phasic, subcutaneous
  • forceful pressure
  • when pushed down, fluid moves, when released, fluid returns and exerts pressure on neurons within layers
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12
Q

(touch receptors)

ruffini corpuscle

A
  • tonic, subcutaneous

- strong stimuli

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13
Q

(taste)

basal cell

A

stem cells

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14
Q

(taste)

support cell

A

provides support

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15
Q

(taste)

pore

A

saliva pools so we can see what chemicals are present

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16
Q

(taste)

cilia

A

increase surface area

17
Q

(taste)

salty

A

sodium channels always open

depolarize when salt ion present (follow conc. gradient)

18
Q

(taste)

sour

A

H+ blocks K+ channels
depolarization; channels always open
*vit. C in acid needed by collagen

19
Q

(taste)

sweet

A

GPCR; second messenger system (want glucose)

  • often gets glucose and other things that come with it
  • changes metabolism of cells
20
Q

(taste)

bitter

A

to detect poisonous (alkaloids)

-sensation and perception (genetic)

21
Q

(taste)

umami

A

ability to detect amino acids

22
Q

(smell)

olfaction

A
  • certain patterns of neurons vs. specific receptors for specific smells
  • increased sensitivity and decreased specificity
  • processed in limbic system (memory/emotion)
23
Q

(smell)

olfactory epithelium

A

superior concha (bone right above nasal cavity)

  • supporting cells (structure)
  • olfactory receptor cells (neurons with stem cells that are always being replaced-sheets)
  • basal cells (stem cells)
24
Q

(smell)

anosmia

A
  • loss (partial loss) of the sense of smell
  • causes: traumatic injury to cribform plate, exposure to toxic chemicals, Zn deficiency, aging (decrease stem cell population)