Touch Flashcards
What are the 4 types of ‘touch’ sensations?
- Somatosensation - general term for body sensory signals
- Proprioception - mediated by kinesthetic and vestibular receptors
- Nociception - pain
- Thermoreception - temperature
Where are touch receptors found?
Embedded in dermis and epidermis
What are the 3 attributes of a touch receptor?
- Type of stimulation
- Size of receptive field
- Rate of adaptation
What are the two types of slow adapting touch receptors?
Slow adapting I - steady downwards pressure, fine spatial detail and low frequency vibrations
Slow adapting II - sustained pressures and skin stretch
What are the two types of fast adapting touch receptors?
Fast adapting I - 5-50Hz
Fast adapting II - 50-700 Hz
What information do kinesthetic receptors provide?
- Where limbs are
- What movements are made
What are the two types of thermoreceptors?
- Warm fibres
2. Cold fibres
How does tactile information get to the brain?
- Axons of various tactile receptors combine into single nerve trunks
- Several nerve trunks from different areas of body combine into spinal chord
What are the two groups of nociceptors?
A-delta - quick shallow pain
C fibres - throbbing pain