sensorimotor systems Flashcards
Example of transduction
Pacinian corpuscle: skin receptors that respond to vibration and pressure (sense texture)
Transduction steps to action potential
- stimuli stretch their membrane
- opens sodium channels
- graded generator potential
- possible action potential
Parts of body most sensitive to touch
face, bottom of feet, and fingertips
Hierarchical Organization
(association cortex) issues general commands and lower levels (motor neurons and muscles) take care of the details
Motor output is guided by…
sensory input
Posterior Parietal Association Cortex
- Before an effective response can be initiated, the sensorimotor system must know the positions of various parts of the body and of objects in the external world; current thinking is that the posterior parietal cortex performs these functions.
- The posterior parietal cortex receives input from visual, auditory, and somatosensory systems (that is why it is considered to be an association cortex); most of its output goes to secondary motor cortices.
Dorsolateral Prefrontal Association Cortex
Projections to this area are from the posterior parietal cortex; this area projects to parts of the secondary motor cortex, the primary cortex the motor neurons firing the earliest (prior to a motor task) are located in the
the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, indicating that this area may work with the posterior parietal cortex in decisions regarding voluntary response initiation.
Sensorimotor Association Cortex
Posterior Parietal & Dorsolateral Prefrontal
Secondary Motor Cortex
Mirror Neurons: fire when an individual performs a particular goal-directed hand movement or when he/she observes the same goal-directed movement performed by another individual
- a possible mechanism for social cognition
Primary Motor Cortex
Primary motor cortex is in the precentral gyrus of the frontal lobe. It is somatotopically organized; its organization was discovered by Penfield, who stimulated the cortices of
conscious patients during brain surgery.
Sensory Homunculus
map along the cerebral cortex of where each part of the body is processed
Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia
The cerebellum and basal ganglia are both important subcortical sensorimotor structures, but neither participates directly in the transmission of signals to the spinal cord.
-higher motor activities
Cerebellum
- The cerebellum constitutes only 10% of the brain’s mass, but it contains over half the brain’s neurons
- It is thought to correct deviations from intended movements.
Long-recognized role in motor learning, and more recently appreciated for a role in the fine tuning and learning of nonmotor cognitive responses. - 3 roles: balance, coordination, motor learning
Phasic VS Tonic receptors
phasic: displays adaption
tonic: show little or no adaption
Polymodal
neurons process input from different sensory systems