Chapter 6

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What is the intensity of a sound wave called?​

amplitude

Most theorists believe that the first sensory system was ____.​

chemical

30. The scala media makes up part of the ____.​

cochlea

The scala vestibuli makes up part of the ____.​

cochlea

Pitch is a perception related to which aspect of sound?​

frequency

The ____ of a sound is the number of compressions per second.​

frequency

A mild pain stimulus is associated with a release of ____.​

glutamate

What is the perception of the intensity of a sound wave called?​

loudness

What kind of deafness is the result of damage to the cochlea or the hair cells?​

nerve

The brain chemicals known as endorphins produce effects similar to which substance?​

opiates

The structure that we commonly refer to as the ear (on the outside of the head) is formally known as the ____.​

pinna

115. A person who "sees" spoken language or music may be experiencing ____.​

synesthesia

To what lobe of the cerebral cortex is auditory information sent?​

temporal

How do sound waves ultimately result in the production of receptor potentials?​

​Hair cells in the cochlea vibrate, causing ion channels to open in their membrane.

Which of the following is true for nerve deafness?​

​It can result from damage to the cochlea.

What is the major problem for the frequency theory of sound perception?​

​It requires that neurons respond as quickly than they are able to do.

Why is it important for sound vibrations to be amplified as they pass through the ear?​

​More force is needed to create waves in fluid.

What process is predicted by the gate theory of pain?​

​Non-pain information can inhibit pain information.

​What occurs to a tone as the frequency increases?

​Pitch gets higher

Which statement is TRUE of various types of somatosensation?​

​They are at least partly distinct all the way from the receptors to the cerebral cortex.

What is unusual about olfactory receptors compared to most other mature mammalian neurons?​

​They are replaceable when old neurons die.

Three small bones connect the tympanic membrane to the oval window. What is the function of these bones?​

​They convert airwaves into waves of greater pressure.

Visual imagery is to ____ as auditory imagery is to ____.​

​V1; A1

An individual with damage to the primary somatosensory cortex would most have problems with ____.​

​ability to locate where they are being touched

The ability to hear a note and identify it perfectly is called ____.​

​absolute pitch

Each receptor responds to a wide range of stimuli and contributes to the perception of each of them. This type of coding is referred to as ____.​

​across-fiber

Loudness is to ____ as pitch is to ____.​

​amplitude; frequency

What is a dermatome?​

​an area of the skin innervated by a given spinal nerve

Areas bordering the primary auditory cortex are important for ____.​

​analyzing the meaning of sounds

A tonotopic map refers to a(n) ____.​

​auditory cortex map of sounds

The eighth cranial nerve contains both a(n) ____ component and a ____ component.​

​auditory; vestibular

According to the frequency theory, the ____.​

​basilar membrane vibrates in synchrony with a sound, producing action potentials at the same frequency

Damage to V1 produces ____ and damage to A1 produces ____.​

​blindness; deafness to complex sounds

Each spinal nerve has ____.​

​both a sensory and a motor component

Large-diameter pain axons ____.​

​carry sharp pain information

In adult humans, the taste buds are ____.​

​concentrated along the outside edge of the tongue

Reduced response to one taste after exposure to another is referred to as ____.​

​cross-adaptation

Along each strip of somatosensory cortex, different sub-areas respond to ____.

​different areas of the body

Damage to the primary auditory cortex results in ____.​

​difficulty in responding to sequences of sounds

Tinnitus may be ____.​

​due to a phenomenon like the phantom limb

Meissner's corpuscles are ____.​

​elaborate neuron endings for touch

Ruffini's endings are ____.​

​elaborate neuron endings for touch

Studies with placebos and studies using hypnotism suggest that much of the reduction in pain is the result of decreased activation in the ____.​

​emotion areas of the brain sing

Taste and smell axons converge onto many of the same cells in an area called the ____.​

​endopiriform cortex

The fact that the refractory period limits the firing rate of a neuron is problematic for which of the following?​

​frequency theory only

Perception of a low tone is to ____ as perception of a high tone is to ____.​

​frequency theory; place theory

A mild degree of pain releases the neurotransmitter ____. A more intense pain also releases ____.​

​glutamate; substance P

Vibrations in the fluid of the cochlea causes ____.​

​hair cells to displace

Itching is primarily the result of ____.​

​histamine release

A sound shadow refers to ____.​

​how much louder a high-frequency sound is for the ear closest to the sound

How many kinds of olfactory receptors do we have?​

​hundreds

Olfactory information is coded in receptor cells through ____.​

​hundreds of types of receptor molecules, each responsive to a different chemical

One difference between labeled-line coding and across-fiber pattern coding is that labeled-line is ____.​

​less versatile

What sound characteristics can be compared between the two ears to locate the source of the sound?​

​loudness and timing

In the auditory system, hair cells are specialized receptors that respond to ____.​

​mechanical displacement

Conductive deafness is also known as ____.​

​middle ear deafness

Morphine and other opiate drugs decrease sensitivity to pain by ____.​

​mimicking the effects of endorphins at the synapses

The receptors for taste are ____.​

​modified skin cells

Repeated exposure to male pheromones may be associated with ____ in young women who are not sexually active.​

​more regular menstrual cycles

Patients with damage in area MT have problems with perception of ____.​

​movement of objects and sound

What does the vestibular system detect?​

​movement of the head

The vomeronasal organ (VNO) is a set of receptors located ____.​

​near, but separate from, the olfactory receptors

The taste nerves initially project to the ____.​

​nucleus of the tractus solitarius

Olfactory receptors carry their message to the ____.​

​olfactory bulb

Where are the auditory receptor cells located?​

​on the basilar membrane

The tympanic membrane connects to three tiny bones that transmit the vibrations to the ____. ​

​oval window

Somatosensory information travels from the thalamus to which area of the cortex?​

​parietal lobe

Humans localize low frequencies by ____ differences and high frequencies by ____ differences. ​

​phase; loudness

In terms of sound localization, low frequencies are to ____ differences, as high frequencies are to ____ differences.​

​phase; loudness

Many women living in a college dormitory will gradually begin to synchronize their menstrual cycles. The research indicates that this is, at least in part, based on ____.​

​pheromones

The fact that the various parts of the basilar membrane are tightly bound together is problematic for which of the following?​

​place theory only

In the otolith organs, the otoliths are calcium carbonate particles that ____.​

​push against hair cells when moved

Pacinian corpuscles respond best to ____.​

​rapid mechanical pressure

Chemicals that prevent sodium from crossing the membrane ____.​

​reduce the intensity of salty tastes

Anti-inflammatory drugs, such as ibuprofen, relieve pain by ____.​

​reducing the release of chemicals from damaged tissues

Taste perception in the brain depends on ____.​

​relative activity of different taste neurons

Which two structures provide information about vestibular sensation?​

​semicircular canals and otolith organs

Pain receptors of the skin are ____.​

​simple, bare neuron endings

Morphine is effective in relieving ____.​

​slow, dull pain

Olfaction also plays a subtle role in ____.​

​social behavior

Stimulation of a touch receptor opens ____ channels in the axon.​

​sodium

What kind of receptors detect pain, warmth, and cold?​

​somatosensory

The sensory aspect of pain activates the ____ cortex, whereas the emotional aspect activates the ____ cortex.​

​somatosensory; cingulate

One hypothesis of synesthesia is that ____.​

​some of the axons from one cortical area have branches into another cortical area.

What neurotransmitter is released by axons that carry pain information to the brain?​

​substance P

Timing differences can be used most accurately for localizing ____.​

​sudden-onset sounds

The somatosensory system involves sensation of ____.​

​the body and its movements

Most auditory information is sent to which hemisphere of the brain?​

​the contralateral side

The current view of how we perceive sounds less than 100 Hz is based on ____.​

​the frequency of action potentials

An acceleration of the head at any angle causes ____.​

​the jelly-like substance in one of the semicircular canals to push against hair cells

When mechanical pressure bends the membrane of a Pacinian corpuscle, ____.​

​the membrane's resistance to the flow of sodium ions decreases

The eardrum vibrates at ____.​

​the same frequency as the sound waves that hit it

The eardrum is also known as the ____.​

​tympanic membrane

A distinctive feature of itch is that it relies on ____.​

​unusually slow axons

The ____ nucleus of the thalamus is associated with pain perception of the body.​

​ventral posterior

Which ability would be most impaired with damage to the vestibular senses?​

​visually tracking an object while dancing

We can identify a wide variety of bitter substances because ____.​

​we have many different bitter receptors

The current view of how we perceive high frequencies is based on ____.​

​where along the basilar membrane neurons fire most rapidly

If you are a supertaster, then ____.​

​you are more sensitive than the average person to nearly all tastes


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