1 / 14

14 October 2009 Chapter 7 Sensory Physiology

14 October 2009 Chapter 7 Sensory Physiology. Aspects of a stimulus that must be encoded using only action potentials: What? (modality & labeled line) Where? (location enhanced by lateral inhibition) How long? (duration, onset/offset.. Adaptation) How strong? (intensity). Figure 7.01.

caelan
Télécharger la présentation

14 October 2009 Chapter 7 Sensory Physiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 14 October 2009 Chapter 7 Sensory Physiology

  2. Aspects of a stimulus that must be encoded using only action potentials: What? (modality & labeled line) Where? (location enhanced by lateral inhibition) How long? (duration, onset/offset.. Adaptation) How strong? (intensity)

  3. Figure 7.01 1st order sensory neuron 1st order sensory neuron Example: a rod or cone of the retina

  4. Figure 7.16 Adequate Stimulus & Labeled Line Stimulus Modality Each type of receptor responds best to a specific stimulus called its adequate stimulus.

  5. Figure 7.02

  6. Figure 7.03

  7. Figure 7.11 Examples: waistband of underwear, top of socks, earrings, mechanoreceptors in carotid arteries for blood pressure YouTube

  8. Figure 7.04 Review definition of receptive field; 1st, 2nd, and 3rd order sensory neurons each have receptive fields. = 1st order sensory neuron

  9. Figure 7.05 Stimulus Intensity Within a cell’s receptive field, stimulus intensity is encoded by frequency of action potentials.

  10. Figure 7.06 Stimulus Localization The size of receptive fields varies dramatically in different regions of skin (i.e. lips, palm, fingertip, calf). For touch discrimination, small receptive fields allow greater accuracy in “two point discrimination” test (upcoming lab!)

  11. Figure 7.07 Stimulus Localization This 1st order sensory neuron will have a higher frequency of action potentials if the stimulus is in the center if its receptive field. However, this neuron also uses action potential frequency to encode stimulus intensity. Therefore, this neuron would not be very good at encoding the precise location at which a stimulus was delivered.

  12. Figure 7.08 Stimulus Localization& Intensity Receptive fields of different neurons often overlap such that any patch of skin may have several receptors of the same type (modality) and receptors of different types (different modalities I.e. touch, pain temperature, etc.) Overlapping receptive fields of touch receptors (Meissners, Merkels) allow for more precise localization of a stimulus via the mechanism of lateral inhibition (next slide.)

  13. Figure 7.09 Stimulus Localization & Intensity Lateral inhibition exaggerates the difference in stimulus intensity detected by adjacent neurons.

  14. Figure 7.10 Stimulus Localization & Intensity Lateral inhibition improves stimulus localization.

More Related