Sensory Receptors 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are sensory receptors?

A

Sensory receptors are nerve endings with specialised non-neural structures

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2
Q

What do sensory receptors do?

A

Sensory receptors are transducers that convert different forms of energy into frequency of action potentials, informing the CNS about the internal and external environment

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3
Q

What is sensory modality?

A

Sensory modality is the stimulis type activating a receptor

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4
Q

What is an adequete stimulis?

A

An adequete stimulis is the type of energy to which a receptor normally responds

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5
Q

What can you say about sensory receptors being activated by many stimuli?

A

Sensory receptors are highly sensitive to one kind of stimuli, but may be activated by another

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6
Q

What are some different types of receptors?

A

Some different types of receptors are:

Mechanoreceptors (mechanical stimuli like touch)

Proprioreceptors (informations about position in space)

Nociceptors (pain)

Thermoreceptors (cold and warmth)

Chemoreceptors (chemical change)

Photoreceptors (responds to the wavelength of light)

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7
Q

What does sensory receptor transduction involve?

A

Sensory receptor transduction involves ion channels opening and closing, adequete stimuli generates a graded potential

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8
Q

What is membrane deformation?

A

Membrane deformation is adequete stimuli in mechanoreceptors and proprioreceptors

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9
Q

What does membrane deformation activate?

A

Membrane deformation activates stretch sensitive ion channels, causing a local graded potential

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10
Q

What happens when the graded potential reaches threshold?

A

When the graded potential reaches threshold an action potential is fired

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11
Q

What is frequency coding of stimulis intensity?

A

This means a larger stimuli produces a larger graded potential which produces higher frequency of action potentials fired

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12
Q

What does the number of receptors activated in an area reflect?

A

The number of receptors activated in an area reflects the stimulis intensity

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13
Q

What are some contrasts in the action potentials of some mechanoreceptors?

A

In some mechanoreceptors if the stimuli persists then action potentials are constantly fired

In others, action potentials are only fired when something changes

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14
Q

What is adaptation?

A

Adaptation is when some mechanoreceptors adapt to a maintained stimulus and only signal change

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15
Q

What are the two different kinds of adapting receptors?

A

The two different kinds of adapting receptors are:

Rapidly/moderately adapting receptors (fire AP at change)

Slowly adapting receptors (constantly fires AP)

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16
Q

Why do nocioreceptors not adapt?

A

Nocioreceptors do not adapt because they are free nerve endings

17
Q

What is the pacinian corpuscle and how does it work?

A

The pacinian corpuscle is a mechanoreceptor:

  1. Mechanical stimuli deforms capsule
  2. Stretches nerve endings and opens ion gated channel
  3. Na+ influx causes graded potential
  4. Action potential generated and fired
18
Q

What does rapid adaption occur?

A

Rapid adaption occurs because the fluid redistributes in the capsule and removes mechnical stress from the nerve ending

19
Q

How do nerve endings respond without a capsule?

A

Without a capsule, bare nerve endings have no adaptation and fire constant action potentials

20
Q

What are receptive fields?

A

Receptive fields are somatic sensory neurons activated by stimuli in a specific area

21
Q

What posseses receptive fields?

A

Sensory receptors posses receptive fields

22
Q

What does our ability to determine two points on the skin depends on?

A

Our ability to determine two points on the skin depends on:

Receptive field size

Neuronal convergence

23
Q

What is our ability to determine two points on the skin tested by?

A

The two point discrimination test

24
Q

What is neuronal convergence?

A

Neuronal convergence is when multiple pre-synaptic neurons input a smaller number of post synaptic neurons

25
Q

What do sensory neurons with neighbouring receptive fields show?

A

Neighbouring neurons with receptive fields show neuronal convergence

26
Q

What does neuronal convergence allow?

A

Neuronal convergence allows sub threshold stimuli to summate at the secondary neuron to generate an action potential

27
Q

What leads to an insensitive area?

A

Neuronal convergence and a large receptive field leads to an insensitive area

28
Q

What is an example of a sensitive and insensitive area?

A

The lips are sensitive

The back is insensitive

29
Q

What is acutiy?

A

Acuity is the ability to locate a stimulis on the skin and differentiate it from another closeby

30
Q

When does high acuinty occur?

A

High acuinity happens when lots of signals from an area goes to the brain, low acuinity happens when less go

31
Q

What is lateral inhibition?

A

Lateral inhibition is when information from a neuron from a sensory receptor at the end of a stimuli is inhibited by information from the centre

32
Q

What does lateral inhibition allow us to do?

A

Lateral inhibition allows us to precisely locate stimulis

33
Q

What is tonic level of firing?

A

Tonic level of firing is a base level of nerve impulses firing when nothing is going on