Section 0.1.1 Flashcards
- Compare and contrast the general functions of the afferent and efferent divisions of the peripheral nervous system. - Describe the physiology of the senses. - Explain the types of receptors and how they function throughout the peripheral nervous system.
What do afferent neurons do?
carry nerve impulses from the peripheral receptors and special sense organs to the CNS
also called receptors or sensory neurons
describe the structure of afferent neurons
small, round cell body with a single long dendrite and a short axon
the dendrite extends to the periphery and functionally acts as an axon meaning that once an appropriate stimulus is received, it conducts action potentials towards the cell body
where are afferent nerve cell bodies found?
In clusters called ganglia immediately external to the spine.
Where do the axons of efferent neurons extend?
their axons extend into the dorsal horn of the spinal cord
What is transduction?
the conversion of an environmental signal to an electrical signal.
this occurs in afferent neurons; once a threshold stimulus has been reached and a receptor is activated, afferent neurons use action potentials to propagate this signal
What four different properties do afferent neurons use to allow the CNS to accurately differentiate incoming signals from the PNS?
- Modality
- Intensity
- Location
- Duration
Describe how afferent neurons use modality to allow the CNS to differentiate signals.
Each type of receptor is specialized to respond to a different type of energy or stimulus. This is what we
mean when we use the term modality.
Photoreceptors: responsive to visible wavelengths of light
Mechanoreceptors: responsive to mechanical energy. For example, skeletal muscle receptors are sensitive to stretch and
the receptors in the ear contain fine hairs cells that bend in response to sound waves.
Mechanoreceptors can also respond to vibration and acceleration.
Thermoreceptors: sensitive to heat
Chemoreceptors: sensitive to specific chemicals and include the receptors for taste, smell, contents of the digestive tract,
as well as things like the presence of oxygen in the blood
Describe how afferent neurons use intensity to allow the CNS to differentiate signals.
action potentials are all-or-none. This means that afferent neurons cannot encode the strength of the stimulus by simply changing the strength of the action potential - this is constant. A strong signal, however, can trigger an increased frequency of action potentials. Thus, nerve cells code the intensity of information by the frequency of action potential
Describe how afferent neurons use location to allow the CNS to differentiate signals.
The brain is able to identify the site of sensory stimulation using the location of activated afferent
fibres.
The ways in which neurons are able to encode the location of a stimulus:
Receptive Field: Each neuron has a region of the environment to which it is sensitive, called a receptive field. If a stimulus appears in a neuron’s receptive field, the neuron will fire and location is communicated to the brain.
Multiple Sensors: Our brain can compare inputs from more than one sensor. For example, we have two eyes and two ears.
Gradients: With smell, we can determine location based on gradients. For example, we smell something and then move in some direction. If the smell has become more intense, we know we’re going toward its source
Describe how afferent neurons use duration to allow the CNS to differentiate signals.
Afferent neurons also encode the duration of a stimulus and communicate this to the brain for processing. Some cells fire as long as the stimulus is present, and some fire briefly as the stimulus goes on, then stop, and then fire briefly when the stimulus goes off.
True or false: The receptors can be a separate receptor cell closely associated with the peripheral ending of a neuron
True
Describe the process of the beginning of transduction
The receptors can either be the specialized ending of an afferent neuron or a separate receptor cell closely associated with the peripheral ending of a neuron. It is in these receptors that transduction occurs.
In either case, stimulation of a receptor alters its membrane
permeability, causing the opening of nonselective cation channels (depolarizing the membrane potential)
This change in potential due to an incoming signal is known as a receptor potential in specialized receptor cells or a generator potential in the ending of an afferent neuron
Describe the mechanism by which specialized afferent ending receptors create graded potentials.
In the case of a specialized afferent nerve ending, the receptor potential itself can cause the afferent nerve fibre to reach threshold and trigger an action potential
Describe the mechanism by which separate receptor cells create graded potentials.
In the case of a separate receptor, when the receptor potential is strong enough it will release a
chemical messenger that diffuses to the afferent neuron and opens chemically gated sodium channels.
If threshold is achieved, then the afferent nerve fibre will initiate and propagate an action potential
How are afferent neurons able to encode the intensity of a signal to transmit this information
to the CNS
A larger intensity stimulus can increase the size of the receptor/generator potential. This cannot bring about a larger action potential due to the all-or-none law, but it can induce rapid firing of action potentials in the afferent neuron. Stronger stimuli can also affect many neighbouring receptors, which further communicates to the CNS the intensity of the stimulus