Lecture 16: Hearing 2 and Olfaction Flashcards
Inferior Colliculus
-Receives converging sound information from cochlear nucleus and superior olive.
- Sends information about sound location to the visual superior colliculus.
- Synchronizes auditory and visual maps.
Auditory Cortex (AC)
- Splits into left and right auditory cortex
- Higher level auditory processing station
Auditory Cortex Lesions
- Don’t become deaf
- Animals can still detect and respond to sounds
- AC Lesions impair recognition of complex sounds (such as speech) and impair hearing in noisy environments
Neurons in the Auditory Cortex
- Neurons in the AC respond to both simple and complex sounds
- Their receptive field can be described in a frequency response area (FRA)
Best/Characteristic Frequency
The sound frequency that makes a neuron respond the strongest
The AC is organized ____________
Tonotopically; by in order by characteristic frequency
The AC exhibits _________________
Experience-dependent plasticity
Odor Guided Navigation Experiment
- Odor info coming through two nostrils can be used to identify odor location
- Blind Eastern American Moles trained to detect odor source
- Blocking of one nostril caused errors to the opposite side
Odorants
A molecule that has a smell
Odors
The sensation that a mix of odorants gives
Olfactory Epithelium
- Found at the top of the nasal cavity
- Odorants enter either through the nose or back of the throat and dissolve in the mucus covering of the epithelium
Olfactory Sensory Neuron
- Converts smells to neural signals
- Odorants bind to receptors on the cilia of olfactory sensory neurons
- Unlike most neurons, these neurons undergo constant turnover every 4-6 weeks (like the hippocampus)
Olfactory Transduction
- Binding of an odorant causes the olfactory receptor to interact with a G-protein
- Causes a chain of reactions which leads to influx of calcium and sodium –> depolarization
- If the olfactory sensory neuron is sufficiently depolarized it will fire an action potential
Olfactory Receptors
- Each olfactory sensory cell expresses only 1 type of receptor
- Each receptor can bind to a number of odorants (combinatorial coding)
Glomeruli
- Olfactory receptor cells project to glomeruli in the olfactory bulb
- Each glomerulus receives input from just one type of odorant receptor