Ch 16 Senses
General region
A large receptive field detects only the _________ ________ of a stimulus.
No
Are all stimuli sensations?
Tonic
Are proprioceptors tonic or phasic?
50
At what age does the sense of taste begin to diminish?
Olfactory bulbs
Axons of olfactory nerves synapse with secondary neurons in the ________ _________ which are located on the inferior side of the frontal lobes of the brain.
Tonic receptors
Do tonic or phasic receptors provide your sense of equilibrium (balance)?
Somatic
Do visceral or somatic stimuli become sensation?
No
Does sensory information to the brainstem and hypothalamus become sensations?
Distribution, origin, modality
Each receptor belongs to 3 clubs (classification criteria) based on receptor __________, stimulus __________, and ___________ of stimulus.
Receptive field
Each receptor has a territory, a region of the body that it detects stimuli from. This territory is called a _______ _________
Somatic
General receptors found in the skin and joints, muscles, and tendons that provide sensory information that can become a sensation are ____________ sensory receptors
Visceral
General receptors found in the walls of organs that respond to temperature, chemicals, stretch, and pain are ___________ sensory receptors
They maintain a resting membrane potential
How are receptors like neurons and muscles?
Less sensitive and developed
How does human olfaction compare to other animals?
Visceral Nociceptors
If the tissue of an organ is deprived of oxygen, over stretched, or suffering trauma it will stimulate the _________ ____________.
Phasic
Is smell phasic or tonic?
Gustation, olfaction, vision, audition, equilibrium
Name the 5 special senses.
1. Olfactory tract 2. olfactory bulb 3. olfactory nerves 4. nasal conchae
Name the numbered structures
Receptor proteins
Odorant molecules bind to __________ __________ on olfactory hairs and generate a nerve impulse.
Special
Of general and special senses, which is housed in complex organs of the head?
Replaced
Olfactory receptor cells are one of the few neuronal types that are __________
Liver or gallbladder
Pain in the skin of the right cervical region may indicate a problem with the . . .
Adaptation
Phasic receptors lose their sensitivity to a continuously applied stimulus. This is called _________
Modality, stimulus, sensation
Receptors are transducers that have __________ gated channels. These channels open in response to a _________ to allow the movement of ions and depolarize the receptor, generating an electric nerve signal that travels to the CNS. If this signal makes it to the cerebral cortex it will become a __________.
Stimuli
Receptors detect changes in both the internal and external environment. These changes are called . . .
Skin, viscera
Receptors for general senses are distributed throughout the _________ and ___________.
Simple
Receptors for general senses are usually __________ in structure.
Ascending tracts within the spinal cord
Referred pain occurs because cutaneous and visceral sensory neurons use the same . . .
Olfactory tracts
Secondary neuron axons from the olfactory bulb form the ________ _______ that run along the inferior side of the brain.
Exact location
Small receptive fields allow us to identify the _________ _________ of a stimulus.
Thalamus
Smell is different from other sensory information in that it is not filtered through the __________.
Body surface and skeletal muscles
Somatic nociceptors detect chemical, heat, or mechanical damage to the
Gustatory
Taste buds are structures on the tongue that house taste receptors called ___________ cells.
Tongue and soft palate
Taste buds occur on the ________ and _________ __________
Ethmoid
The nerve signal for smell travels in the olfactory nerves through the cribiform plate of the __________ bone.
No
The neurons of the heart share a spinal ascending tract with the neurons of the medial side of the left arm. During a heart attack, the left arm hurts. Is the left arm sending pain signals?
Hypothalamus
The olfactory tracts also send smell information to the __________ which gives you visceral reactions to the smell such as salivating, sneezing, or gagging.
General and special
The two types of receptor distribution are ___________ and ___________
The molecules that are detected for the sense of smell
What are odorants?
Skin
Which organ contains tactile receptors?
Olfaction and gustation
Which senses use chemoreceptors?
Phasic receptors
Which type of receptor detect a change in stimulus or a new stimulus?
Baroreceptors
Which type of receptor detects your blood pressure and lets you know when your bladder is full?
Tactile
Which type of receptor is the most numerous in the body?
Tonic receptors
Which type of receptors continuously respond to stimuli?
30
Who has a better sense of smell, someone who is 30 or someone who is 80?
Would use too much energy to have all those extra receptors and require too much surface area
Why not have all receptive fields small?
Amygdala
In addition to the primary olfactory cortex, the olfactory tracts also transmit smell information to the _________ where smells are associated with emotions and stored together in the memory.
Dissolved in the aqueous environment
In order for a chemoreceptor to detect a chemical, it must be
An internal organ/viscera
In referred pain, what is the actual source of the pain?
Dermatome of the skin
In referred pain, where is the pain perceived to be coming from?
Exteroceptors, interoceptors, proprioceptors
What are the 3 classifications based on stimulus origin?
Papillae
What are the bumps you see on your tongue?
Change or new stimulus
What do phasic receptors detect?
Respond to a stimulus and initiate sensory input to the CNS
What do receptors do?
Touch, pressure, vibration
What do tactile receptors respond to?
Changes in temperature
What do thermoreceptors detect?
interoceptors
What do you call receptors that detect stimuli that is located in the internal organs?
Stimulus
What does a modality channel open in response to?
Mechanoreceptor
Which modality group do tactile receptors belong to?
Changes in the internal or external environment that are detected by receptors
What are stimuli?
Taste producing molecules in food
What are tastants?
Changes one form of energy into another
What does a transducer do?
Electrical nerve signal
What form of energy do receptors transform stimuli into?
Conscious awareness of sensory information
What is a sensation?
7 to 10 days
What is the lifespan of a gustatory cell?
Receptor
What is the name of a structure that responds to a stimulus and initiates sensory input to the CNS?
Modality gated channels
What kind of channels do receptors use to change their polarity and initiate a nerve signal?
Dissolve in the mucus of the nasal cavity
What must odorants do to be detected?
Taste buds
What structures are located along the sides of the papillae?
Equilibrium
What term refers to the sense of balance?
Audition
What term refers to the sense of hearing?
Vision
What term refers to the sense of sight?
Olfaction
What term refers to the sense of smell?
Gustation
What term refers to the sense of taste?
Modality
When you classify a receptor according to its __________, you classify it based on the type of stimulus it responds to, such as sound waves, temperature, chemicals, etc.
Adaptation
When you first put on perfume/cologne you notice the smell, but then after a while you no longer notice it. This is because your phasic receptors have undergone __________ and become less sensitive to the stimulus.
Phasic
When you first put your sunglasses on you notice the feel of them, but after a while you no longer notice them. This is because your __________ receptors have undergone adaption.
In the head
Where are special senses located?
External environment
Where do exteroceptors detect stimuli from?
Muscles, tendons, and joints
Where do proprioceptors detect stimuli from?
Skin and hypothalamus
Where in the body do thermoreceptors occur?
Internal organs
Where is the stimuli that is detected by interoceptors?
Tactile receptors
Which mechanoreceptor is found in the dermis and subcutaneous layer and responds to touch, pressure, and vibration?
Mechanoreceptors
Which modality are most of the receptors in the skin and the receptors in the ear?
Baroreceptors
Which modality of receptor detects changes in stretch?
Mechanorecptors
Which modality of receptors responds to touch, pressure, vibration, and stretch?
Eye
Which organ contains photorecptors?
Temporal lobe
Which part of the brain contains the primary olfactory cortex and receives signals from the olfactory tracts?
Cerebral cortex
Which part of the brain must a stimulus reach in order to become a sensation?
Baroreceptors
Which receptor branches repeatedly in the elastic layers of an organ or blood vessel?
Chemoreceptors
Which receptor type by modality includes your sense of taste, sense of smell, and monitoring of your blood composition?
Photoreceptors
Which receptors are found only in the eye and detect light?
Chemoreceptors
Which receptors detect chemicals or specific molecules that are dissolved in fluid?
Proprioceptors
Which receptors detect your body movement and position?
Thermoreceptors
Which receptors respond to changes in temperature
Nociceptors
Which receptors respond to pain?
Decreases
With age, the rate of olfactory cell replacement ____________, resulting in a lessened sense of smell
Food, other people, potential danger
You use olfaction to gain information about
Exteroceptors
Your skin detects the outside temperature, your olfactory cells detect molecules in the air, and receptors in your ears detect sound waves in the air. Which stimulus origin classification do these receptors belong to?