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Title: Table of Contents


1
CHAPTER 45Sensory Systems
2
Chapter 45 Sensory Systems
  • Sensory Cells, Sensory Organs, and Transduction
  • Chemoreceptors Responding to Specific Molecules
  • Mechanoreceptors Detecting Stimuli that Distort
    Membranes

3
Chapter 45 Sensory Systems
  • Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
    Light
  • Sensory Worlds Beyond Our Experience

4
Sensory Cells, Sensory Organs, and Transduction
  • Sensory cells transduce information about an
    animals external and internal environment into
    action potentials.
  • Review Figures 45.1, 45.2
  • 4

5
Figure 45.1 Part 1
figure 45-01a.jpg
  • Figure 45.1 Part 1

6
Figure 45.1 Part 2
figure 45-01b.jpg
  • Figure 45.1 Part 2

7
Figure 45.2
figure 45-02.jpg
  • Figure 45.2

8
Sensory Cells, Sensory Organs, and Transduction
  • The interpretation of action potentials as
    particular sensations depends on which neurons in
    the CNS receive them.
  • 8

9
Sensory Cells, Sensory Organs, and Transduction
  • Membrane receptor proteins of sensory cells cause
    ion channels to open or close, generating
    receptor potentials.
  • Receptor potentials can spread to regions of the
    sensory cell plasma membrane that generate action
    potentials, or influence release of
    neurotransmitter from the sensory cell.
  • Review Figure 45.3
  • 9

10
Figure 45.3
figure 45-03.jpg
  • Figure 45.3

11
Sensory Cells, Sensory Organs, and Transduction
  • Adaptation enables the nervous system to ignore
    irrelevant stimuli while remaining responsive to
    relevant or to new stimuli.
  • 11

12
Chemoreceptors Responding to Specific Molecules
  • Smell, taste, and the sensing of pheromones are
    examples of chemosensation.
  • Chemoreceptor cells have receptor proteins that
    can bind to specific molecules that come into
    contact with the sensory cell membrane.
  • Review Figures 45.5, 45.6
  • 12

13
Figure 45.5
figure 45-05.jpg
  • Figure 45.5

14
Chemoreceptors Responding to Specific Molecules
  • Binding of an odorant molecule to a receptor
    protein causes production of a second messenger
    in the chemoreceptor cell.
  • The second messenger alters ion channels and
    creates a receptor potential.
  • 15

15
Chemoreceptors Responding to Specific Molecules
  • Chemoreceptors in the mouth cavities of
    vertebrates are responsible for the sense of
    taste.
  • Review Figure 45.6
  • 16

16
Figure 45.6
figure 45-06.jpg
  • Figure 45.6

17
Mechanoreceptors Detecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
  • The skin has a diversity of mechanoreceptors that
    respond to touch and pressure.
  • The density of mechanoreceptors in any skin area
    determines the sensitivity of that area.
  • Review Figure 45.7
  • 18

18
Figure 45.7
figure 45-07.jpg
  • Figure 45.7

19
Mechanoreceptors Detecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
  • Stretch receptors in muscles, tendons, and
    ligaments inform the CNS of the positions of and
    the loads on parts of the body.
  • Review Figure 45.8
  • 20

20
Figure 45.8
figure 45-08.jpg
  • Figure 45.8

21
Mechanoreceptors Detecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
  • Hair cells are mechanoreceptors that are not
    neurons.
  • Bending of their stereocilia alters their
    membrane proteins and therefore their receptor
    potentials.
  • Hair cells are found in organs of equilibrium and
    orientation.
  • Review Figures 45.9, 45.10, 45.11
  • 22

22
Figure 45.9
figure 45-09.jpg
  • Figure 45.9

23
Figure 45.10
figure 45-10.jpg
  • Figure 45.10

24
Figure 45.11 Part 1
figure 45-11a.jpg
  • Figure 45.11 Part 1

25
Figure 45.11 Part 2
figure 45-11b.jpg
  • Figure 45.11 Part 2

26
Mechanoreceptors Detecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
  • Hair cells are responsible for mammalian auditory
    sensitivity.
  • Ear pinnae collect and direct sound waves to the
    tympanic membrane, which vibrates in response to
    sound waves.
  • The vibrations are amplified through a chain of
    ossicles that conduct them to the oval window.
  • Movements of the oval window create pressure
    waves in the fluid-filled cochlea. Review Figure
    45.12, 45.13
  • 29

27
Figure 45.12 Part 1
figure 45-12a.jpg
  • Figure 45.12 Part 1

28
Figure 45.12 Part 2
figure 45-12b.jpg
  • Figure 45.12 Part 2

29
Figure 45.12 Part 3
figure 45-12c.jpg
  • Figure 45.12 Part 3

30
Mechanoreceptors Detecting Stimuli that Distort
Membranes
  • The basilar membrane running down the center of
    the cochlea is distorted at specific locations
    depending on the frequency of the pressure wave.
  • These distortions cause bending of hair cells in
    the organ of Corti, which rests on the basilar
    membrane.
  • Changes in hair cell receptor potentials create
    action potentials in the auditory nerve, which
    conducts the information to the CNS.
  • Review Figure 45.13
  • 31

31
Figure 45.13
figure 45-13.jpg
  • Figure 45.13

32
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • Photosensitivity depends on the capture of
    photons of light by rhodopsin.
  • Rhodopsin is a photoreceptor molecule consisting
    of opsin and retinal.
  • Absorption of light by retinal is the first step
    in a cascade of intracellular events leading to a
    change in the receptor potential of the
    photoreceptor cell.
  • Review Figure 45.15
  • 33

33
Figure 45.14
figure 45-14.jpg
  • Figure 45.14

34
Figure 45.15
figure 45-15.jpg
  • Figure 45.15

35
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • When excited by light, vertebrate photoreceptor
    cells hyperpolarize and release less
    neurotransmitter onto neurons with which they
    form synapses.
  • They do not fire action potentials.
  • Review Figures 45.16, 45.17, 45.18
  • 35

36
Figure 45.16
figure 45-16.jpg
  • Figure 45.16

37
Figure 45.17 Part 1
figure 45-17a.jpg
  • Figure 45.17 Part 1

38
Figure 45.17 Part 2
figure 45-17b.jpg
  • Figure 45.17 Part 2

39
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • Vision results when eyes focus patterns of light
    onto layers of photoreceptors.
  • The simple eye cups of flatworms can sense the
    direction of a light source
  • The compound eyes of arthropods can detect shapes
    and patterns
  • The eyes of cephalopods and vertebrates have
    lenses.
  • Review Figures 45.18, 45.19, 45.20
  • 40

40
Figure 45.18
figure 45-18.jpg
  • Figure 45.18

41
Figure 45.19
figure 45-19.jpg
  • Figure 45.19

42
Figure 45.20
figure 45-20.jpg
  • Figure 45.20

43
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • The eyes of vertebrates and cephalopods focus
    detailed images of the visual field onto dense
    arrays of photoreceptors that transduce the
    visual image into neural signals.
  • Review Figure 45.21
  • 43

44
Figure 45.21
figure 45-21.jpg
  • Figure 45.21

45
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • The vertebrate photoreceptors are rod and cone
    cells.
  • Rod cells are responsible for dim light and
    black-and-white vision
  • Cone cells are responsible for color vision by
    virtue of their spectral sensitivities.
  • Review Figure 45.23
  • 45

46
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • The vertebrate retina is a dense array of neurons
    lining the back of the eyeball.
  • It consists of five layers of cells.
  • The outermost layer consists of rods and cones.
  • The innermost layer consists of ganglion cells,
    which send their axons in the optic nerve to the
    brain.
  • Between the photoreceptors and ganglion cells are
    neurons that process information from the
    photoreceptors.
  • Review Figure 45.24
  • 47

47
Figure 45.24
figure 45-24.jpg
  • Figure 45.24

48
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • The area of the retina that receives light from
    the center of the visual field, the fovea, has
    the greatest density of photoreceptors.
  • In humans it contains almost exclusively cone
    cells, which are responsible for color vision but
    not very sensitive in dim light.
  • 50

49
Photoreceptors and Visual Systems Responding to
Light
  • Each ganglion cell is stimulated by light falling
    on a small circular patch of photoreceptors
    called a receptive field.
  • Receptive fields have a center and a surround,
    which have opposing effects on the ganglion cell.
  • If the center is excitatory, the surround is
    inhibitory, and vice versa.
  • See fig.45.25
  • 51

50
Figure 45.25 Part 1
figure 45-25a.jpg
  • Figure 45.25 Part 1

51
Figure 45.25 Part 2
figure 45-25b.jpg
  • Figure 45.25 Part 2

52
Sensory Worlds Beyond Our Experience
  • Many animals have sensory abilities that we do
    not share.
  • Bats echolocate
  • Insects see ultraviolet radiation
  • Pit vipers see infrared radiation
  • Fish sense electric fields.
  • 52
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