1 / 19

Chapter 10 The Senses

Chapter 10 The Senses. 10.1-10.5. 10.1. Introduction. Introduction. Sensory receptors detect environmental changes trigger nerve impulses Travel along sensory pathways to CNS Processed and interpreted. 2 Categories of Sensory Receptors. Receptors for somatic senses

emele
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 10 The Senses

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. Chapter 10The Senses 10.1-10.5

  2. 10.1 Introduction

  3. Introduction • Sensory receptors detect environmental changes • trigger nerve impulses • Travel along sensory pathways to CNS • Processed and interpreted

  4. 2 Categories of Sensory Receptors • Receptors for somatic senses • Touch, pressure, temperature, and pain • Widely distributed throughout skin and deeper tissues • Structurally simple • Receptors for special senses • Smell, taste, hearing, equilibrium, and vision • Complex

  5. 10.2 Receptors, Sensations, and Perceptions

  6. Receptors, Sensation, and Perception • Each receptor is sensitive to one distinct type of stimulus • Sensation – raw form in which receptors send info to the brain • Perception – the way our brains interpret this info

  7. 5 Types of Receptors • Chemoreceptors– stimulated by changes in chemical concentration of substances • Pain receptors – “ “ by tissue damage • Thermoreceptors – “ “ by changes in temperature • Mechanoreceptors – “ “by changes in pressure or movement • Photoreceptors – “ “ by light energy

  8. Sensation and Perception • Sensation – occurs when the brain becomes aware of sensory impulses • All nerve impulses are the same • Perception – occurs when the brain interprets those sensory impulses • Depends on which region of the brain receives the impulse • Projection – brain projects the sensation back to its apparent source • Allows a person to pinpoint the region of stimulation

  9. Sensory Adaptation • Your brain prioritizes! (otherwise overwhelmed) • Sensory adaptation – the ability to ignore unimportant stimuli • Peripheral adaptation – receptors become unresponsive • Central adaptation – inhibits pathways to sensory regions of the cerebral cortex

  10. 10.3 General Senses

  11. Touch and Pressure Senses • 3 receptors that sense mechanical forces that deform or displace tissues • Free nerve endings • Common in epithelial tissues • Responsible for itching • Tactile (Meissner’s) corpuscles • Abundant in hairless portions of skin • Responds to motion of objects that barely touch the skin • Lamellated (Pacinian) corpuscles • Common in deeper dermal and subcutaneous tissue • Respond to heavy pressure

  12. Temperature Senses • Warm receptors • Free nerve endings that respond to warmer temps • 77 F-113 F • Cold receptors • Free nerve endings that respond to colder temps • Both adapt rapidly

  13. Sense of Pain • Free nerve endings widely distributed throughout skin and internal tissues (NOT in the brain) • Protect the body since tissue damage stimulates them • Adapt poorly

  14. Visceral Pain • Only receptors in viscera to produce sensations • Referred pain – visceral pain may feel as if it is coming from some part of the body other than the part being stimulated • Arises from common nerve pathways • Cerebral cortex incorrectly interprets the source of pain

  15. Pain Nerve Fibers • Acute pain fibers • Thin and myelinated (conduct impulses rapidly) • Associated with sharp pain • Chronic pain fibers • Thin and unmyelinated (conduct impulses more slowly) • Associated with dull aching sensations • Both fibers are usually stimulated

  16. Regulation of Pain Impulses • Awareness of pain in thalamus • Cerebral cortex determines intensity, source, and mediates emotional and motor responses • Enkephalins, seratonin and endorphins are released to block pain signals

  17. 10.4 Special Senses

  18. Special Senses • Senses whose sensory receptors are within large, complex sensory organs in the head

  19. Special Senses Senses Respective Organs • Smell • Taste • Hearing • Equilibrium • Sight • Olfactory Organs • Taste buds • Ears • Ears • Eyes

More Related