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Chapter 15: The Special Senses

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Chapter 15: The Special Senses J.F. Thompson, Ph.D. & J.R. Schiller, Ph.D. & G. Pitts, Ph.D. The Five Special Senses: Smell and taste: chemical senses (chemical ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 15: The Special Senses


1
Chapter 15 The Special Senses
  • J.F. Thompson, Ph.D. J.R. Schiller, Ph.D. G.
    Pitts, Ph.D.

2
The Five Special Senses
  • Smell and taste chemical senses (chemical
    transduction)
  • Sight light sensation (light transduction)
  • Hearing sound perception (mechanical
    transduction)
  • Equilibrium static and dynamic balance
    (mechanical transduction)

3
Special Sensory Receptors
  • Distinct types of receptor cells are confined to
    the head region
  • Located within complex and discrete sensory
    organs (eyes and ears) or in distinct epithelial
    structures (taste buds and the olfactory
    epithelium)

4
The Chemical Senses Taste and Smell
  • The receptors for taste (gustation) and smell
    (olfaction) are chemoreceptors (respond to
    chemicals in an aqueous solution)
  • Chemoreception involves chemically gated ion
    channels that bind to odorant or food molecules

5
Taste
6
Location of Taste Buds
  • Located mostly on papillae of tongue
  • Two of the types of papillae
  • fungiform
  • circumvallate

7
Taste Buds
  • Each papilla contains numerous taste buds
  • Each taste bud contains many gustatory cells
  • The microvilli of gustatory cells have
    chemoreceptors for tastes

8
The Five Basic Tastes
  • Sweet sugars, alcohols, some amino acids, lead
    salts
  • Sour H ions in acids
  • Salty Na and other metal ions
  • Bitter many substances including quinine,
    nicotine, caffeine, morphine, strychnine, aspirin
  • Umami the amino acid glutamate (beef taste)

9
Taste Transduction
  • Incompletely understood
  • A direct influx of various ions (Na, H) or the
    binding of other molecules which leads to
    depolarization of the receptor cell
  • Depolarization of the receptor cell causes it to
    release neurotransmitter that stimulates nerve
    impulses in the sensory neurons of gustatory
    nerves

10
Sensory Pathways for Taste
  • Afferent impulses of taste stimulate many
    reflexes which promote digestion (increased
    salivation, and gastrointestinal motility and
    secretion)
  • Bad taste sensations can elicit gagging or
    vomiting reflexes

11
Smell
12
Location of Olfactory (Odor) Receptors
13
Odor Receptors
  • Bipolar neurons
  • Collectively constitute cranial nerve I
  • Unusual in that they regenerate (on a 60 day
    replacement cycle)

14
Odors
  • Very complicated
  • Humans can distinguish thousands
  • More than a thousand different odorant-binding
    receptor molecules have been identified
  • Different combinations of specific
    molecule-receptor interactions produce different
    odor perceptions

15
Transduction of Smell
  • Binding of an odorant molecule to a specific
    receptor activates a G-protein and then a second
    messenger (cAMP)
  • cAMP causes gated Na and Ca2 channels to open,
    leading to depolarization

16
Olfactory Pathway
  • One path leads from the olfactory bulbs via the
    olfactory tracts to the olfactory cortex where
    smells are consciously interpreted and identified
  • Another path leads from the olfactory bulbs via
    the olfactory tracts to the thalamus and limbic
    system where smells elicit emotional responses
  • Smells can also trigger sympathetic nervous
    system activation or stimulate digestive processes

17
Vision
18
Surface Anatomy of the Eye
  • Eyebrows divert sweat from the eyes and
    contribute to facial expressions
  • Eyelids (palpebrae) blink to protect the eye from
    foreign objects and lubricate their surface
  • Eyelashes detect and deter foreign objects

19
Conjunctiva
  • A mucous membrane lining the inside of the
    eyelids and the anterior surface of the eyes
  • forms the conjunctival sac between the eye and
    eyelid
  • Forms a closed space when the eyelids are closed
  • Conjunctivitis (pinkeye) inflammation of the
    conjunctival sac

20
The Lacrimal Apparatus
  • Lacrimal Apparatus
  • lacrimal gland
  • lacrimal sac
  • nasolacrimal duct
  • Rinses and lubricates the conjunctival sac
  • Drains to the nasal cavity where excess moisture
    is evaporated

21
Extrinsic Eye Muscles
  • Lateral, medial, superior, and inferior rectus
    muscles (recall, rectus straight) superior and
    inferior oblique muscles

22
Internal Anatomy of the Eye--Tunics
  • Fibrous tunic sclera cornea
  • Vascular tunic choroid layer
  • Sensory tunic retina

23
Internal Anatomy of the Eye
  • Anterior Segment contains the Aqueous Humor
  • Iris
  • Ciliary Body
  • Suspensory Ligament
  • Lens
  • Posterior Segment contains the Vitreous Humor

24
Autonomic Regulation of the Iris
Pupil Constricts
Pupil Dilates
25
The Two Layers of the Retina
  • Outer pigmented layer has a single layer of
    pigmented cells, attached to the choroid tunic,
    which absorbs light to prevent light scattering
    inside
  • Inner neural layer has the photosensory cells and
    various kinds of interneurons in three layers

26
Neural Organization in the Retina
  • Photoreceptors rods (for dim light) and cones
    (3 colors blue, green and red, for bright light)
  • Bipolar cells are connecting interneurons
  • Ganglion cells axons become the Optic Nerve

27
Neural Organization in the Retina
  • Horizontal Cells enhance contrast (light versus
    dark boundaries) and help differentiate colors
  • Amacrine cells detect changes in the level of
    illumination

28
The Optic Disc
  • Axons of ganglion cells exit to form the optic
    nerve
  • Blood vessels enter to serve the retina by
    running on top of the neural layer
  • The location of the blind spot in our vision

29
Micrograph of the Retina
  • Light must cross through the capillaries and the
    two layers of interneurons to reach the
    photoreceptors, the rods and cones

Light
30
Opthalmoscope Image of the Retina
  • The Macula Lutea (yellow spot) is the center of
    the visual image
  • The Fovea Centralis is a central depression where
    light falls more directly on cones providing for
    the sharpest image discrimination
  • Light bouncing off RBCs hemoglobin causes red
    eye in flash photos

31
Circulation of the Aqueous Humor
  • Ciliary process at the base of the iris produces
    aqueous humor
  • Scleral venous sinus returns aqueous humor to the
    blood stream
  • Glaucoma any disturbance that increases aqueous
    humor volume and pressure which causes pain
    ultimately the vitreous humor crushes the retina
    causing blindness

32
Hearing
33
External Ear
  • Pinna (auricle) focuses sound waves on the
    tympanic membrane
  • Ceruminous glands guard the external auditory
    canal

34
Middle Ear Auditory Tube
  • Three auditory ossicles (bones) serve as a lever
    system to transmit sound to the inner ear
  • Pharyngotympanic (auditory tube) connects to
    pharynx, allowing air pressure to equalize on
    both side of the tympanic membrane

35
Middle Ear Ossicles (median view)
  • Malleus (hammer), incus (anvil) and stapes
    (stirrup) act to increase the vibratory force on
    the oval window
  • Tensor tympani and stapedius muscles control the
    tension of this lever system to prevent damage to
    the delicate tympanic and round window membranes

36
The Membranous Labyrinth
  • A series of tiny fluid-filled chambers in the
    temporal bone
  • Cochlea tranduces sound waves
  • Semicircular canals and their ampullae transduce
    balance and equilibrium
  • The vestibule connects the two portions

37
The Cochlea Two Coiled Tubes
  • Larger outer tube is folded but continuous (like
    a coiled letter U) the scala vestibuli and
    scala tympani contains perilymph fluid
  • Smaller inner tube is the scala media (cochlear
    duct) contains endolymph fluid

38
The Spiral Organ of Corti
  • Between the scala tympani and the scala
    media/cochlear duct is the complex receptor
    system the spiral organ of Corti
  • Sensory Hair Cells stand on the basilar membrane
    and their processes are attached to the Tectorial
    Membrane

39
Wave Pulses in the Cochlea
  • Stapes moving at the oval window creates pulses
    of vibration in the perilymph of the scala
    vestibuli and scala tympani
  • Harmonic vibrations are created at right angles
    in the endolymph of the scala media which move
    the basilar membrane

40
Transduction of Sound Waves
  • Movement against the tectorial membrane
    stimulates the hair cells to send impulses to the
    auditory cortex
  • Round window moves to accommodate the vibrations
    initiated by the stapes

41
Wave Pulses in the Cochlea
  • Stapes moving at the oval window creates pulses
    of vibration in the perilymph of the scala
    vestibuli and scala tympani
  • Harmonic vibrations are created at right angles
    in the endolymph of the scala media which move
    the basilar membrane

42
Transduction of Sound Waves
43
Resonance of Basilar Membrane
  • High notes are detected at the base of the
    cochlea
  • Low notes are detected at the apex
  • Due to differences in the width and flexibility
    of the basilar membrane

44
Auditory Pathway
  • Afferent impulses for sounds are routed
  • Vestibulocochlear Nerve VIII (cochlear branch)
  • Nuclei in the medulla oblongata where motor
    responses can turn the head to focus on sound
    sources
  • Primary Auditory Cortex in the temporal lobe for
    conscious interpretation

45
Balance and Coordination
46
Macula in the Saccule Utricle
  • Chambers near the oval window filled with
    perilymph
  • CaCO3 otoliths (ear stones) slide over the
    surface lining cells in response to gravity
  • Static equilibrium tells the CNS which way is
    up

47
Macular Transduction
  • Hair cells stereocilia move in response to the
    sliding otoliths
  • To send impulses to the CNS for interpretation

48
Semicircular Canals
  • Three endolymph-filled tubes in the bony
    labyrinth
  • Each C-shaped loop is in a plane at right angles
    to the other two
  • Each has an expanded ampulla containing a sensory
    structure, the cupula

49
Ampullar Transduction
  • Movement in the plane of one of the canals causes
    endolymph to flow and bends the cupola
  • Hair cells stereocilia move in response to the
    movement
  • Dynamic equilibrium tells the CNS which way is
    the head or body is moving

50
Pathways of Balance and Orientation
  • Integration of sensory modalities
  • Sight
  • Proprioception
  • Static equilibrium
  • Dynamic equilibrium
  • Output to skeletal muscles to position
  • Eyes
  • Head and neck
  • Trunk

51
Take a Tour of the Virtual Ear at
http//www.augie.edu/perry/ear/hearmech.htm
52
End Chapter 15
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