1 / 17

Sensory Physiology

Sensory Physiology. Sections 3.3-3.6. Regulatory Mechanism. Controller. Effector. Sensor. (Feedback). Simple Nerve Pathway. CNS (Interneurons). Sensory Neuron. Motor Neuron. Effector. Sensor. E.g. Reflex - simple, stereotyped response; very fast. Complex Nerve Pathway. Other motor.

Mercy
Télécharger la présentation

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. Sensory Physiology Sections 3.3-3.6

  2. Regulatory Mechanism Controller Effector Sensor (Feedback)

  3. Simple Nerve Pathway CNS (Interneurons) Sensory Neuron Motor Neuron Effector Sensor E.g. Reflex - simple, stereotyped response; very fast

  4. Complex Nerve Pathway Other motor Other sensors CNS Sensory Neuron Motor Neuron Effector Sensor Other sensors Other motor More complex, modulated response; slower

  5. Simple Nerve Pathway:Spinal Reflexes • Stretch spindle fiber in muscle → sensory neuron • sensory neuron synapses directly with motor neuron in CNS • Motor neuron → muscle Manual Fig 3.11

  6. Inhibitory Stretch Reflex • Golgi tendon organ • sensory neuron synapses w/interneuron, which synapses w/motor neuron • Inhibits MN, thus prevents contraction Textbook Fig 12.28

  7. Reciprocal Innervation • Activation of both excitatory and inhibitory motor responses in antagonistic muscles • Prevents both muscles from contracting simultaneously Textbook Fig 12.29

  8. Experiment: Spinal Reflexes • Whack your partner! • Patellar reflex • Achilles reflex • Biceps reflex

  9. Punctate Distribution of Cutaneous Sensors • Different sensations perceived at different points on surface of the skin • Different sensor types distributed throughout skin. • Perception localized to specific points

  10. Acuity • Acuity • ability to discriminate size, shape of an object in the environment • Determined by size of receptive field • area that, if stimulated, will cause a response from a single sensory neuron •  receptor density,  receptive field size, acuity

  11. Touch Acuity Large Fields, Low Density Small Fields, High Density

  12. Experiment:Two Point Touch Discrimination • Subject should have eyes closed • Start with tines ~2.5 cm apart • Touch to subject’s skin w/ both tines simultaneously • If they can feel two points, close slightly and repeat. • Repeat until subject can feel only one pt. • Distance btw tines at pt where subject loses ability to feel two pts = diameter of receptive field • Test • Index finger • Palm • Lower Arm • Nape of Neck Textbook Fig 10.5

  13. Sensory Adaptation • Response of sensors to constant stimulation • Phasic receptors • exhibit sensory adaptation • firing rate of receptor (# AP’s) decreases with constant stimulus • Tonic receptors • exhibit little adaptation • maintain constant firing rate as long as stimulus is applied Textbook Fig 10.1

  14. Experiment:Thermoreceptor Adaptation • Place one hand in cold water, the other in hot water for 60 seconds • Place both hands simultaneously in warm water. • What do you feel in each hand?

  15. Sensory Pathways and Perception • sensors are transducers • convert environmental change into an electrical signal • CNS interprets electrical signals • not the environmental changes directly • e.g. blow to head perceived as flash of light • CNS interprets origin of stimuli based upon neurons that deliver sensory info. into CNS • Can deceive CNS with respect to origin

  16. Sensory Pathways and Perception • Referred pain • perception of pain originating from location other than actual site of tissue damage • E.g. phantom limb pain • Irritation of severed nerve endings induces AP’s • CNS perceives stimulus being applied to limb not present • E.g. angina pectoris • Damage to heart perceived in left chest, shoulder & arm • pain sensors of visceral organs often use shared pathways of interneurons leading to the brain

  17. Sensory Pathways and Perception

More Related