Characteristics of Sensory Receptors - Sensory receptors may be categorized on the basis of their structure, the
stimulus energy they transduce, or the nature of their response.
- Receptors may be dendritic nerve endings, specialized neurons, or specialized
epithelial cells associated with sensory nerve endings.
- Receptors may be chemoreceptors, photoreceptors, thermoreceptors, mechanoreceptors,
or nociceptors.
- Proprioceptors include receptors in the muscles, tendons, and joints.
- The senses of sight, hearing, taste, olfaction, and equilibrium are
grouped as special senses.
- Tonic receptors continue to fire as long as the stimulus is maintained.
They monitor the presence and intensity of a stimulus.
- Phasic receptors respond to stimulus changes; they do not respond to
a sustained stimulus.
- Phasic receptors partly account for sensory adaptation to sustained
stimuli.
- According to the law of specific nerve energies, each sensory receptor responds
with lowest threshold to only one modality of sensation.
- That stimulus modality is called the adequate stimulus.
- Stimulation of the sensory nerve from a receptor by any means is interpreted
in the brain as the adequate stimulus modality of that receptor.
- Generator potentials are graded changes (usually depolarizations) in the
membrane potential of the dendritic endings of sensory neurons.
- The magnitude of the potential change of the generator potential is directly
proportional to the strength of the stimulus applied to the receptor.
- After the generator potential reaches a threshold value, increases in
the magnitude of the depolarization result in increased frequency of action
potential production in the sensory neuron.
Cutaneous Sensations - Somatesthetic information, from cutaneous receptors and proprioceptors,
is carried by third-order neurons to the postcentral gyrus of the cerebrum.
- Proprioception and pressure sensation ascend on the ipsilateral side of
the spinal cord, synapse in the medulla and cross to the contralateral side,
and then ascend in the medial lemniscus to the thalamus; neurons in the
thalamus in turn project to the postcentral gyrus.
- Sensory neurons from other cutaneous receptors synapse and cross to the
contralateral side in the spinal cord and ascend in the lateral and ventral
spinothalamic tracts to the thalamus; neurons in the thalamus then project
to the postcentral gyrus.
- The receptive field of a cutaneous sensory neuron is the area of skin
that, when stimulated, produces responses in the neuron.
- The receptive fields are smaller where the skin has a greater density
of cutaneous receptors.
- The two-point threshold test reveals that the fingertips and the tip
of the tongue have a greater density of touch receptors, and thus a greater
sensory acuity, than other areas of the body.
- Lateral inhibition acts to sharpen a sensation by inhibiting the activity
of sensory neurons coming from areas of the skin around the area that is
most greatly stimulated.
Taste and Smell - The sense of taste is mediated by taste buds.
- A particular taste bud is most sensitive to one of four taste modalities:
sweet, sour, bitter, and salty.
- Taste buds are located in characteristic regions of the tongue according
to the modality to which they are most sensitive.
- Salty and sour taste are produced by movements of sodium and hydrogen
ions, respectively, through membrane channels; sweet and bitter tastes are
produced by binding of molecules to protein receptors that are coupled to
G-proteins.
- The olfactory receptors are neurons that synapse within the olfactory bulb
of the brain.
- Odorant molecules bind to membrane protein receptors. There may be as
many as a 1,000 different receptor proteins responsible for the ability
to detect as many as 10,000 different odors.
- Binding of an odorant molecule to its receptor causes the dissociation
of large numbers of G-protein subunits. The effect is thereby amplified,
which may contribute to the extreme sensitivity of the sense of smell.
Vestibular Apparatus and Equilibrium - The structures for equilibrium and hearing are located in the inner ear
within the membranous labyrinth.
- The structure involved in equilibrium, known as the vestibular apparatus,
consists of the otolith organs (utricle and saccule) and the semicircular
canals.
- The utricle and saccule provide information about linear acceleration,
whereas the semicircular canals provide information about angular acceleration.
- The sensory receptors for equilibrium are hair cells that support numerous
stereocilia and one kinocilium.
- When the stereocilia are bent in the direction of the kinocilium, the
cell membrane becomes depolarized.
- When the stereocilia are bent in the opposite direction, the membrane
becomes hyperpolarized.
- The stereocilia of the hair cells in the utricle and saccule project into
the endolymph of the membranous labyrinth and are embedded in a gelatinous
otolithic membrane.
- When a person is upright, the stereocilia of the utricle are oriented
vertically; those of the saccule are oriented horizontally.
- Linear acceleration produces a shearing force between the hairs and the
otolithic membrane, thus bending the stereocilia and electrically stimulating
the sensory endings.
- The three semicircular canals are oriented at nearly right angles to each
other, like the faces of a cube.
- The hair cells are embedded within a gelatinous membrane called the cupula,
which projects into the endolymph.
- Movement along one of the planes of a semicircular canal causes the endolymph
to bend the cupula and stimulate the hair cells.
- Stimulation of the hair cells in the vestibular apparatus activates sensory
neurons of the vestibulocochlear nerve (VIII), which projects to the cerebellum
and to the vestibular nuclei of the medulla oblongata.
- The vestibular nuclei in turn send fibers to the oculomotor center,
which controls eye movements.
- Spinning and then stopping can thus cause oscillatory movements of the
eyes called nystagmus.
The Ears and Hearing - The outer ear funnels sounds waves of a given frequency (measured in hertz)
and intensity (measured in decibels) to the tympanic membrane, causing it
to vibrate.
- Vibrations of the tympanic membrane cause movement of the middle-ear ossicles,
malleus, incus, and stapes, which in turn produces vibrations of the oval
window of the cochlea.
- Vibrations of the oval window set up a traveling wave of perilymph in the
scala vestibuli.
- This wave can pass around the helicotrema to the scala tympani, or it
can reach the scala tympani by passing though the scala media (cochlear
duct).
- The scala media is filled with endolymph.
- The membrane of the cochlear duct that faces the scala vestibuli is
called the vestibular membrane.
- The membrane that faces the scala tympani is called the basilar membrane.
- The sensory structure of the cochlea is called the spiral organ or organ
of Corti.
- The organ of Corti rests on the basilar membrane and contains sensory
hair cells.
- The stereocilia of the hair cells project upward into an overhanging
tectorial membrane.
- The hair cells are innervated by the vestibulocochlear (VIII) nerve.
- Sounds of high frequency cause maximum displacement of the basilar membrane
closer to its base near the stapes; sounds of lower frequency produce maximum
displacement of the basilar membrane closer to its apex near the helicotrema.
- Displacement of the basilar membrane causes the hairs to bend against
the tectorial membrane and stimulate the production of nerve impulses.
- Pitch discrimination is thus dependent on the region of the basilar
membrane that vibrates maximally to sounds of different frequencies.
- Pitch discrimination is enhanced by lateral inhibition.
The Eyes and Vision - Light enters the cornea of the eye, passes through the pupil (the opening
of the iris) and then through the lens, from which point it is projected to
the retina in the back of the eye.
- Light rays are bent, or refracted, by the cornea and lens.
- Because of refraction, the image on the retina is upside down and right
to left.
- The right half of the visual field is projected to the left half of the
retina in each eye, and vice versa.
- Accommodation is the ability to maintain a focus on the retina when the
distance between the object and the eyes is changed.
- Accommodation is produced by changes in the shape and refractive power
of the lens.
- When the muscles of the ciliary body are relaxed, the suspensory ligament
is tight and the lens is pulled to its least convex form.
- This gives the lens a low refractive power for distance vision.
- As an object is brought closer than 20 feet from the eyes, the ciliary
body contracts, the suspensory ligament becomes less tight, and the lens
becomes more convex and more powerful.
- Visual acuity refers to the sharpness of the image. It depends in part on
the ability of the lens to bring the image to a focus on the retina.
- People with myopia have an eyeball that is too long, so that the image
is brought to a focus in front of the retina; this is corrected by a concave
lens.
- People with hyperopia have an eyeball that is too short, so that the image
is brought to a focus behind the retina; this is corrected by a convex lens.
- Astigmatism is the condition in which asymmetry of the cornea and/or lens
causes uneven refraction of light around 360 degrees of a circle, resulting
in an image that is not sharply focused on the retina.
The Retina - The retina contains rods and cones, photoreceptor neurons that synapse with
bipolar cells.
- When light strikes the rods, it causes the photodissociation of rhodopsin
into retinene and opsin.
- This bleaching occurs maximally with a light wavelength of 500 nm.
- Photodissociation is caused by the conversion of the 11-cis to the all-trans
form of retinene, that cannot bond to opsin.
- In the dark, more rhodopsin can be produced, and increased rhodopsin in
the rods, makes the eyes more sensitive to light. This increased concentration
of rhodopsin is partly responsible for dark adaptation.
- The rods provide black-and-white vision under conditions of low light
intensity. At higher light intensity, the rods are bleached out and the
cones provide color vision.
- In the dark, a constant movement of Na+ into the rods produces
what is known as a "dark current."
- When light causes the dissociation of rhodopsin, the Na+ channels
become blocked and the rods become hyperpolarized in comparison to their
membrane potential in the dark.
- When the rods are hyperpolarized, they release less neurotransmitter at
their synapses with bipolar cells.
- Neurotransmitters from rods cause depolarization of bipolar cells in some
cases, and hyperpolarization of bipolar cells in other cases; thus, when
the rods are in light and release less neurotransmitter these effects are
inverted.
- According to the trichromatic theory of color vision, there are three systems
of cones, each of which responds to one of three colors: red, blue, or green.
- Each type of cone contains retinene attached to a different type of protein.
- The names for the cones signify the region of the spectrum in which the
cones absorb light maximally.
- The fovea centralis contains only cones; more peripheral parts of the retina
contain both cones and rods.
- Each cone in the fovea synapses with one bipolar cell, which in turn synapses
with one ganglion cell.
- The ganglion cell that receives input from the fovea thus has a visual
field equal to only that part of the retina which activated its cone.
- As a result of this 1:1 ratio of cones to bipolar cells, visual acuity
is high in the fovea but sensitivity to low light levels is less than
in other regions of the retina.
- In regions of the retina where rods predominate, large number of rods
provide input to each ganglion cell (there is great convergence). As a result,
visual acuity is impaired, but sensitivity to low light levels is improved.
- The right half of the visual field is projected to the left half of the
retina of each eye.
- The left half of the retina sends fibers to the left lateral geniculate
body of the thalamus.
- The left half of the right retina also sends fibers to the left lateral
geniculate body. This is because these fibers decussate in the optic chiasma.
- The left lateral geniculate body thus receives input from the left half
of the retina of both eyes, corresponding to the right half of the visual
field; the right lateral geniculate receives information about the left
half of the visual field.
- Neurons in the lateral geniculate bodies send fibers to the striate
cortex of the occipital lobes.
- The geniculostriate system is involved in providing meaning to the images
that form on the retina.
- Instead of synapsing in the geniculate bodies, some fibers from the ganglion
cells of the retina synapse in the superior colliculus of the midbrain,
which controls eye movements.
- Since this brain region is also called the optic tectum, this pathway
is called the tectal system.
- The tectal system enables the eyes to move and track an object; it is
also responsible for the pupillary reflex and the changes in lens shape
that are needed for accommodation.
Neural Processing of Visual Information - The area of the retina that provides input to a ganglion cells is called
the receptive field of the ganglion cell.
- The receptive field of a ganglion cell is roughly circular, with an "on"
or "off" center and an antagonistic surround.
- A spot of light in the center of an "on" receptive
field stimulates the ganglion cell; whereas a spot of light in its surround
inhibits the ganglion cell.
- The opposite is true for ganglion cells with "off"
receptive fields.
- Wide illumination that stimulates both the center and the surround of
a receptive field affects a ganglion cell to a lesser degree than a pinpoint
of light that illuminates only the center or the surround.
- The antagonistic center and surround of the receptive field of ganglion
cells provide lateral inhibition, which enhances contours and provides better
visual acuity.
- Each lateral geniculate body receives input from both eyes relating to the
same part of the visual field.
- The neurons receiving input from each eye are arranged in layers within
the lateral geniculate.
- The receptive fields of neurons in the lateral geniculate are circular,
with an antagonistic center and surround, much like the receptive field
of ganglion cells.
- Cortical neurons involved in vision may be either simple, complex, or hypercomplex.
- Simple neurons receive input from neurons in the lateral geniculate; complex
neurons receive input from simple cells; and hypercomplex neurons receive
input from complex cells.
- Simple neurons are best stimulated by a slit or bar of light that is located
in a precise part of the visual field and has a precise orientation.
- Complex cells respond best to a straight line that has a particular orientation
and that moves in a particular direction. The position of the line in the
visual field is not important.
- Hypercomplex cells respond best to lines that have a particular length
or have a particular bend or corner.
After studying this chapter, students should be able to . . . - Explain how sensory receptors are categorized, give examples of functional
categories and explain how tonic and phasic receptors differ.
- Explain the law of specific nerve energies.
- Describe the characteristics of the generator potential.
- ve examples of different types of cutaneous receptors and describe
the neural pathways for the cutaneous senses.
- Explain the concepts of receptive fields and lateral inhibition.
- Describe the distribution of taste receptors on the tongue and explain
how salty, sour, sweet and bitter tastes are produced.
- Describe the structure and function of the olfactory receptors, and
explain how odor discrimination might be accomplished.
- Describe the structure of the vestibular apparatus and explain how it
provides information about acceleration of the body in different directions.
- Describe the functions of the outer and middle ear.
- Describe the structure of the cochlea and explain how movements of the
stapes against the oval window result in vibrations of the basilar membrane.
- Explain how mechanical energy is converted into nerve impulses by the
organ of Corti and how pitch perception is accomplished.
- Describe the structure of the eye, and how images are brought to a focus
on the retina.
- Explain how visual accommodation is achieved and describe the defects
associated with myopia, hyperopia, and astigmatism.
- Describe the architecture of the retina, and trace the pathways of light
and nerve activity through the retina.
- Describe the function of rhodopsin in the rods and explain dark adaptation
is achieved.
- Explain how light affects the electrical activity of rods and their
synaptic input to bipolar cells.
- Explain the trichromatic theory of color vision.
- Compare rods and cones with respect to their locations, synaptic connections,
and functions.
- Describe the neural pathways from the retina, explaining the differences
in pathways from different regions of the visual field.
- Describe the receptive fields of ganglion cells and state the stimulus
requirements for simple, complex, and hypercomplex cortical neurons.
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