Introduction to Sensory Physiology and Perception Flashcards
Compare and contrast “all-in-one” receptors with receptors that are separate cells.
All-in-one:
- Receptors are also the primary afferents
- E.g. somatosensory system, olfactory system - nociceptive C and A delta fibres
- Resilient to injury
Separate cells:
- E.g. photoreceptors, auditory hair cells
- Delicate and irreplacable
Define action potential threshold.
The membrane potential at which action potentials are triggered
Define activation threshold
The minimum stimulus strength that will produce action potentials
Define perceptual threshold.
The minimum stimulus strength that will generate enough action potentials to be detected
What is a sensory neuron’s receptive field?
The particular region of sensory space in which a stimulus will modify the action potential firing of one sensory neuron - i.e. an area in which all the receptors transmit information to the CNS via a single sensory neuron.
Describe the relationship between the receptive field size of a region and the cortical representation.
The smaller the receptive field size, the higher the density of innervation - thus, more cortex is needed to deal with the sensory input - i.e. the area is larger on the sensory homunculus.
How is the temporal resolution of sensory information limited?
There is a maximum “firing rate” of action potentials that can encode a stimulus
Explain what temporal adaptation is and why it is useful.
- Adaptation that damps down responses to homogeneous temporal information
- This highlights salient moments, where stimulus strength changes
- It allows receptors to encode changes in stimulus strength over a huge range without saturation
Explain what lateral inhibition is and why it is useful.
- Receptive fields overlap, meaning a stimulus may activate multiple sensory neurons simultaneously
- Lateral inhibition damps down the response of adjacent sensory neurons, allowing enhanced spatial discrimination
- Homogeneous spatial stimuli are suppressed
- This highlights salient locations
- It allows receptors to encode stimulus contrast over a huge range without saturation
In primary cortical areas, how are different sensory qualities represented?
- Different sensory qualities represented in “columns”
- Information from different receptors is widely distributed between different cortical areas
Give 3 examples of brain dysfunction that lead to abnormalities in sensory perception.
- Epileptic activity
- Synaesthesia - e.g. “seeing” a sound
- Phantom limb pain