Our Five Senses Systems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 19
About This Presentation
Title:

Our Five Senses Systems

Description:

Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: karlm Last modified by: Shelley Hatch Created Date: 7/9/2002 7:45:27 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:98
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: KarlM242
Category:
Tags: anatomy | five | senses | systems

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Our Five Senses Systems


1
Our Five Senses Systems
  • Vision
  • Hearing
  • Taste
  • Smell
  • Touch

2
Properties of Sensory Systems
  • Stimulus
  • Internal
  • External
  • Receptors
  • Sense organs - structures
  • specialized to respond to stimuli
  • Conduction
  • Afferent pathway
  • Nerve impulses to the CNS
  • Translation
  • CNS integration and information processing
  • Sensation and perception your reality

3
Different Types of Receptors
  • Mechanoreceptors respond to touch, pressure,
    vibration, stretch, and itch
  • Thermoreceptors sensitive to changes in
    temperature
  • Photoreceptors respond to light energy (e.g.,
    retina)
  • Chemoreceptors respond to chemicals (e.g.,
    smell, taste, changes in blood chemistry)
  • Pain Receptors sensitive to pain-causing stimuli

4
Anatomy of the Eyeball
  • Function of the eyeball
  • Protect and support the photoreceptors
  • Gather, focus, and process light into precise
    images

5
The Inner Layer (Retina)
  • Retina is the innermost layer of the eye lining
    the posterior cavity
  • It contains the photoreceptors cones and rods

6
Photoreceptors
  • Two main types
  • Rod cells
  • More sensitive to light
  • Allow vision in dim light
  • In periphery
  • Cone cells
  • Operate best in bright light
  • High-acuity
  • Color vision blue, green, red cones
  • Concentrated in fovea

7
The Ear Hearing and Equilibrium
  • The ear receptor organ for hearing and
    equilibrium
  • Composed of three main regions
  • Outer ear functions in hearing
  • Middle ear functions in hearing
  • Inner ear functions in both hearing and
    equilibrium

8
The Outer (External) Ear
  • The air inside your ear canal vibrates which
    causes the ear drum to also vibrate
  • The ear drum forms the boundary between the
    external and middle ear

9
The Middle Ear
  • Contain the ear ossicles smallest bones in the
    body
  • Malleus
  • Incus
  • Stapes
  • Attach to the eardrum which vibrates as
    soundwaves come through the ear

Figure 16.17
10
(No Transcript)
11
The Inner (Internal) Ear
  • Inner ear a cavity consisting of three parts
  • Semicircular canals
  • Vestibule
  • Cochlea
  • The inner ear cavity is filled with fluid
    vibrations produce pressure waves in this fluid
  • The sound receptors (mechanoreceptors) are minute
    hair cells located inside the cochlea

12
(No Transcript)
13
The Chemical Senses Taste and Smell
  • Taste gustation
  • Smell olfaction
  • Receptors classified as chemoreceptors
  • Respond to chemicals

14
Taste Gustation
  • Taste receptors
  • Occur in taste buds
  • Most are found on the surface of the tongue
  • Located within tongue papillae

15
Taste Buds
  • Collection of 50 100 epithelial cells
  • Contain long microvilli extend through a taste
    pore
  • Four basic qualities of taste
  • Sweet, sour, salty, and bitter
  • A fifth taste umami, deliciousness
  • No structural difference among taste buds

16
Smell (Olfaction)
  • The lining of the nose has olfactory receptors,
    (chemoreceptors)
  • Nasal surfaces are coated with secretions from
    olfactory glands
  • Olfactory reception involves detecting dissolved
    chemicals as they interact with odorant-binding
    proteins

17
(No Transcript)
18
Touch
  • The skin contains many different types of
    receptors
  • Pain receptors detect whether objects are sharp
    or dangerous
  • There are hot and cold thermoreceptors
  • There are also mechanoreceptors that detect
    pressure and movement on your skin

19
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com