Title: Sensation
1Sensation The special senses
- Dr. Shawna Heber
- Lecture 6
2SENSATION
- Sensation is a conscious or unconscious awareness
of external or internal stimuli.
3Is Sensation Different from Perception?
- Perception is the conscious awareness
interpretation of a sensation. - precisely localization identification
- memories of our perceptions are stored in the
cortex - Sensation is any stimuli the body is aware of
- Chemoreceptors, thermoreceptors, nociceptors,
baroreceptors - What are we not aware of?
- X-rays, ultra high frequency sound waves, UV
light - We have no sensory receptors for those stimuli
4Sensory Modalities
- Sensory Modality is the property by which one
sensation is distinguished from another. - Different types of sensations
- touch, pain, temperature, vibration, hearing,
vision - Generally, each type of sensory neuron can
respond to only one type of stimulus. - Two classes of sensory modalities
- general senses
- special senses
5Sensory Modalities
- The classes of sensory modalities are general
senses and special senses. - The general senses include both somatic and
visceral senses, which provide information about
conditions within internal organs. - The special senses include the modalities of
smell, taste, vision, hearing, and equilibrium.
6Process of Sensation
- Sensory receptors demonstrate selectivity
- respond to only one type of stimuli
- Events occurring within a sensation
- stimulation of the receptor
- transduction (conversion) of stimulus into a
graded potential - vary in amplitude and are not propagated
- generation of impulses when graded potential
reaches threshold - integration of sensory input by the CNS
7Alternate Classifications of Sensory Receptors
- Structural classification
- Type of response to a stimulus
- Location of receptors origin of stimuli
- Type of stimuli they detect
8Classification by Stimuli Detected
- Mechanoreceptors
- detect pressure or stretch
- touch, pressure, vibration, hearing,
proprioception, equilibrium blood pressure - Thermoreceptors detect temperature
- Nociceptors detect damage to tissues pain
- Photoreceptors detect light
- Chemoreceptors detect chemicals dissolved in
solution - taste, smell changes in body fluid chemistry
- Proprioceptors
- muscle, tendon, joint internal ear
- senses body position movement
9Proprioceptive or Kinesthetic Sense
- Awareness of body position movement
- walk or type without looking
- estimate weight of objects
- Proprioceptors adapt only slightly
- Sensory information is sent to cerebellum
cerebral cortex - include muscle spindles (Stretch Reflex) Golgi
tendon organs (Tendon Reflex)
10Muscle Spindles
- Specialized intrafusal muscle fibers enclosed in
a CT capsule - Stretching of the muscle stretches the muscle
spindles sending sensory information back to the
CNS - Spindle sensory fibers monitor changes in muscle
length - Brain regulates muscle tone by causing
contraction in the presence of too much
lengthening (stretch)
11Golgi Tendon Organs
- Found at junction of tendon muscle
- Consists of an encapsulated bundle of collagen
fibers laced with sensory fibers - When the tendon is overly stretched, sensory
signals head for the CNS result in the muscles
relaxation
12VISION
- More than half the sensory receptors in the human
body are located in the eyes. - A large part of the cerebral cortex is devoted to
processing visual information.
13External / Accessory Structures of Eye - Overview
- Extrinsic eye muscles
- Eyelids or palpebrae
- protect lubricate
- Conjunctiva
- Delicate membrane lining eyelids part of the
outer eyeball surface - Lacrimal apparatus
- Secrete tears
14Extraocular Muscles
- Six muscles that insert on the exterior surface
of the eyeball - Innervated by CN III, IV or VI.
- 4 rectus muscles -- superior, inferior, lateral
and medial - 2 oblique muscles -- inferior and superior
- Responsible for gross eye movements
15Eyelids
- The eyelids shade the eyes during sleep, protect
the eyes - Meet at the medial and lateral canthus (corners)
- Eyelashes and eyebrows help protect the eyeballs
from foreign objects, perspiration, and the
direct rays of the sun. - The meibomian glands lubricate the eye
- The ciliary glands lubricate the hair follicles
- When blocked forms a sty
- The conjunctiva is a thin mucous membrane that
lines the inner aspect of the eyelids and is
reflected onto the anterior surface of the
eyeball. - Inflammation Conjunctivitis, contagious form
is pink eye
16Lacrimal Apparatus
- Includes lacrimal glands located above the
lateral end of each eye - Secrete tears at a continuous rate
- Lacrimal canals located medially drain the tears
into the lacrimal sac, to the nasolacrimal duct,
which empties into the nasal cavity - Tears contain water, salt, antibodies, and
antibacterial enzymes
17Lacrimal Apparatus
- About 1 ml of tears produced per day. Spread over
eye by blinking. Contains bactericidal enzyme
called lysozyme.
18Internal Structures The Eyeball
- The eyeball is a hollow sphere with 2
fluid-filled chambers. - The wall is composed of 3 coats called Tunics.
19Tunics (Layers) of Eyeball
- The eye is constructed of three layers
- Fibrous Tunic(outer layer)
- Vascular Tunic (middle layer)
- Nervous Tunic(inner layer)
20Fibrous Tunic -- The Cornea
- Transparent
- Helps focus light (refraction)
- astigmatism
- Avascular
- Transplants
- common successful
- no blood vessels so no antibodies to cause
rejection - Nourished by tears aqueous humor
21Fibrous Tunic -- The Sclera
- White of the eye
- Dense irregular connective tissue layer
- Provides shape support
- Posteriorly pierced by Optic Nerve (CN II)
22Vascular Tunic -- Choroid Ciliary Body
- Choroid
- pigmented epithilial cells (melanocytes) blood
vessels - provides nutrients to retina
- black pigment in melanocytes absorb scattered
light - Ciliary body
- ciliary processes
- folds on ciliary body
- secrete aqueous humor
- ciliary muscle
- smooth muscle that alters shape of lens
23Vascular Tunic -- Iris Pupil
- Colored portion of eye
- Shape of flat donut suspended between cornea
lens - Hole in center is pupil
- Function is to regulate amount of light entering
eye - Autonomic reflexes
- circular muscle fibers contract in bright light
to shrink pupil - radial muscle fibers contract in dim light to
enlarge pupil
24Vascular Tunic -- Muscles of the Iris
- Constrictor pupillae (circular) are innervated by
parasympathetic fibers while Dilator pupillae
(radial) are innervated by sympathetic fibers. - Response varies with different levels of light
25Vascular Tunic -- Description of lens
- Avascular
- Crystallin proteins arranged like layers in onion
- Clear capsule perfectly transparent
- Lens held in place by suspensory ligaments
- Focuses light on retina
26Vascular Tunic -- Suspensory ligament
- Suspensory ligaments attach lens to ciliary
process - Ciliary muscle controls tension on ligaments
lens
27Nervous Tunic -- Retina
- Posterior 3/4 of eyeball
- Optic disc
- optic nerve exiting back of eyeball
- Central retina BV
- fan out to supply nourishment to retina
- visible for inspection
- hypertension diabetes
- Detached retina
- trauma (boxing)
- fluid between layers
- distortion or blindness
View with Ophthalmoscope
28Photoreceptors
- Receptor cells located in the retina that respond
to light - Found over entire retina except at the OPTIC DISK
where the optic nerves leave the eyeball - AKA The blind spot
29Photoreceptors
- Rods
- specialized for black-and-white vision in dim
light - allow us to discriminate between different shades
of dark and light - permit us to see shapes and movement
- Most dense in periphery-peripheral vision
- Cones
- specialized for color vision and sharpness of
vision (high visual acuity) in bright light - most densely concentrated in the center of the
retina, the FOVEA CENTRALIS - The area of highest visual acuity
30Rods Cones--Photoreceptors
- Rods----rod shaped
- shades of gray in dim light
- 120 million rod cells
- shapes movements
- distributed along periphery
- Cones----cone shaped
- sharp, color vision
- 6 million
- Fovea centralis
- densely packed region
- at exact visual axis of eye
- sharpest resolution (acuity)
31Pathway of Nerve Signal in Retina
- Light penetrates retina
- Rods cones transduce light into action
potentials - Rods cones excite bipolar cells
- Bipolars excite ganglion cells
- Axons of ganglion cells form optic nerve leaving
the eyeball (blind spot) - To thalamus then the primary visual cortex
32Lens
- The eyeball contains the nonvascular lens, just
behind the pupil and iris. - The lens fine tunes the focusing of light rays
for clear vision. - With aging the lens loses elasticity and its
ability to accommodate resulting in a condition
known as presbyopia. - Diminished ability to focus the eyes on nearby
objects
33Cavities of the Interior of Eyeball
- Anterior cavity (anterior to lens)
- filled with aqueous humor
- produced by ciliary body
- continually drained
- replaced every 90 minutes
- 2 chambers
- anterior chamber between cornea and iris
- posterior chamber between iris and lens
- Posterior cavity (posterior to lens)
- filled with vitreous body (jellylike)
- floaters are debris in vitreous of older
individuals
34Eye Anatomy
- The pressure in the eye, called intraocular
pressure, is produced mainly by the aqueous
humor. - The intraocular pressure, along with the vitreous
body, maintains the shape of the eyeball and
keeps the retina smoothly applied to the choroid
so the retina will form clear images. - Glaucoma
- increased intraocular pressure
- problem with drainage of aqueous humor
- may produce degeneration of the retina and
blindness
35Near Point of Vision and Presbyopia
- Near point is the closest distance from the eye
an object can be still be in clear focus - 4 inches in a young adult
- 8 inches in a 40 year old
- lens has become less elastic
- 31 inches in a 60 to 80 year old
- Reading glasses may be needed by age 40
- presbyopia
- glasses replace refraction previously provided by
increased curvature of the relaxed, youthful lens
36Refraction Abnormalities
- Myopia is nearsightedness
- Hyperopia is farsightedness
- Astigmatism is a refraction abnormality due to an
irregular curvature of either the cornea or lens.
37Correction for Refraction Problems
- Emmetropic eye (normal)
- can refract light from 20 ft away
- Myopia (nearsighted)
- eyeball is too long from front to back
- glasses concave
- Hypermetropic (farsighted)
- eyeball is too short
- glasses convex (coke-bottle)
- Astigmatism
- corneal surface wavy
- parts of image out of focus
38Application Color Blindness Night Blindness
- Most forms of colorblindness result from an
inherited absence of or deficiency in one of the
three cone photopigments - More common in males.
- A deficiency in rhodopsin may cause night
blindness - Color blindness
- inability to distinguish between certain colors
- absence of certain cone photopigments
- red-green color blind person can not tell red
from green - Night blindness (nyctalopia)
- difficulty seeing in low light
- inability to make normal amount of rhodopsin
- possibly due to deficiency of vitamin A
39Visual Pathway
- Horizontal cells transmit inhibitory signals to
bipolar cells - bipolar or amacrine cells transmit excitatory
signals to ganglion cells - ganglion cells which depolarize and initiate
nerve impulses - Impulses are conveyed through the retina to the
optic nerve, the optic chiasma, the optic tract,
the thalamus, and the occipital lobes of the
cortex
40Brain Pathways of Vision
41Processing of Image Data in the Brain
- Visual information in optic nerve travels to
- hypothalamus to establish sleep patterns based
upon circadian rhythms of light and darkness - midbrain for controlling pupil size
coordination of head and eye movements - occipital lobe for vision
42Visual fields
- Fibers from nasal 1/2 of each retina cross in
optic chiasm - Left occipital lobe receives visual images from
right side of an object through impulses from
nasal 1/2 of the right eye and temporal 1/2 of
the left eye - Left occipital lobe sees right 1/2 of the world
and Right occipital lobe sees left 1/2 of the
world.
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44Eye Reflexes
- Convergence
- Eyes move inward to view close objects
- Photopupillary reflex
- Pupil constricts with bright light
- Accomodation pupillary reflex
- Pupil constricts to view close objects
45CHEMICAL SENSES
- Interaction of molecules with receptor cells
- Olfaction (smell) and gustation (taste)
- Both project to cerebral cortex limbic system
- evokes strong emotional reactions
46Anatomy of olfactory receptors
- The receptors for olfaction, which are
chemoreceptors, are in the nasal epithelium in
the superior portion of the nasal cavity - Supporting cells are epithelial cells of the
mucous membrane lining the nose - For smell to occur, chemicals must dissolve in
the nose mucus and stimulate the olfactory
receptors
47Olfactory Epithelium
- 1 square inch of membrane holding 10-100 million
receptors - Covers superior nasal cavity and cribriform plate
- Cilia project out of epithelium and are bathed by
mucus secreted by underlying glands
48Cells of the Olfactory Membrane
- Olfactory receptors
- Stimulated by chemicals dissolved in mucus
- Impulses travel via the olfactory nerve (CN I) to
cortex
49Physiology of Olfaction - Overview
- Genetic evidence suggests there are hundreds of
primary scents. - In olfactory reception, a generator potential
develops and triggers one or more nerve impulses. - Adaptation to odors occurs quickly, and the
threshold of smell is low only a few molecules
of certain substances need be present in air to
be smelled. - Olfactory receptors convey nerve impulses to
olfactory nerves, olfactory bulbs, olfactory
tracts, and the cerebral cortex and limbic
system. - Hyposmia, a reduced ability to smell, affects
half of those over age 65 and 75 of those over
80. It can be caused by neurological changes,
drugs, or the effects of smoking . - Anosmialack of smell
50Olfaction Sense of Smell
- Odorants bind to receptors
- Na channels open
- Depolarization occurs
- Nerve impulse is triggered
51Adaptation Odor Thresholds
- Adaptation decreasing sensitivity
- Olfactory adaptation is rapid
- 50 in 1 second
- complete in 1 minute
- Low threshold
- only a few molecules need to be present
- methyl mercaptan added to natural gas as warning
52Olfactory Pathway
- Axons from olfactory receptors form the olfactory
nerves (Cranial nerve I) that synapse in the
olfactory bulb - pass through 40 foramina in cribriform plate
- Neurons within the olfactory bulb form the
olfactory tract that synapses on primary
olfactory area of temporal lobe - conscious awareness of smell begins
- Other pathways lead to the frontal lobe where
identification of the odor occurs
53GUSTATORY SENSE OF TASTE
- Taste is a chemical sense.
- To be detected, molecules must be dissolved.
- Taste stimuli classes include sour, sweet,
bitter, and salty.
54Gustatory Sensation Taste
- Taste requires dissolving of substances
- Four classes of stimuli--sour, bitter, sweet, and
salty - Other tastes are a combination of the four
taste sensations plus olfaction. - 10,000 taste buds found on tongue, soft palate
larynx - Chemoreceptors (gustatory cells) are located on
taste buds - Found on sides of circumvallate fungiform
papillae
55Anatomy of Taste Buds
- An oval body consisting of 50 receptor cells
surrounded by supporting cells - A single gustatory hair projects upward through
the taste pore - Basal cells develop into new receptor cells every
10 days.
56Physiology of Taste
- Receptor potentials developed in gustatory hairs
cause the release of neurotransmitter that gives
rise to nerve impulses. - Complete adaptation in 1 to 5 minutes
- Thresholds for tastes vary among the 4 primary
tastes - most sensitive to bitter (poisons)
- least sensitive to salty and sweet
- Mechanism
- dissolved substance contacts gustatory hairs
- receptor potential results in neurotransmitter
release - nerve impulse formed in neuron
57Gustatory Pathway
- Gustatory fibers found in cranial nerves
- VII (facial) serves anterior 2/3 of tongue
- IX (glossopharyngeal) serves posterior 1/3 of
tongue - X (vagus) serves palate epiglottis
- Signals travel to thalamus or limbic system
hypothalamus - Taste fibers extend from the thalamus to the
primary gustatory area on parietal lobe of the
cerebral cortex - provides conscious perception of taste
584 Basic Taste Sensations
- Sweet
- Sugar, saccharine, amino acids
- Anterior portion of tongue
- Sour
- H or acidity
- Sides of tongue
- Bitter
- Alkaloids
- Back of tongue
- Salty
- Metal ions
- Tip of tongue