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Special Senses

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Special Senses. Chapter 16. The Special Senses and their modalities. Olfaction (Smell) - chemical ... Dogs have about 30,000 times the acuity for smell. Gustation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Special Senses


1
Special Senses
  • Chapter 16

2
The Special Senses and their modalities
  • Olfaction (Smell) - chemical
  • Taste (Gustation) chemical
  • Vision (Sight) photo
  • Hearing mechanical
  • Equilibrium - mechanical

3
Olfaction
  • 10 100 million receptors on the roof of the
    nasal cavity. (about 5 square cm)
  • Three types of cells
  • Olfactory receptors (bipolar neurons)
  • Supporting cells (pseudostratified columnar)
  • Basal stem cells (mitotic cells producing new
    receptors)
  • Just about the only nuerons that replace
    themselves in mature humans!
  • Olfactory (Bowmans) glands secrete mucus

4
Olfactory receptors
Fig.16.01
5
Olfactory physiology
  • 7 primary odors
  • Floral
  • Musky
  • Camphorous
  • Pepperminty
  • Etheraeal
  • Pungent
  • Putrid
  • About 10,000 different odors are recognizable
  • Much depends upon experience and synthetic
    processing in the brain
  • Dogs have about 30,000 times the acuity for smell

6
Gustation
  • About 80 of taste is dependent upon smell
  • 5 primary tastes
  • Sweet
  • Salty
  • Sour
  • Bitter
  • Umami (savory)
  • Lowest threshold is for bitter, highest is for
    sweet
  • Lowest adaptation is for bitter, highest for sweet

7
Taste the tongue
Fig.16.02
8
Four types of Papillae
  • Circumvallate at the back of the tongue
  • Fungiform all over
  • Foliate lateral margins of tongue, taste buds
    gone after childhood
  • Filiform all over tongue but not for taste, for
    friction

9
Different receptors respond to different stimuli
10
Neural pathways
  • Anterior tongue innervated by the facial nerve
    (CN VII)
  • Posterior tongue innervated by the
    glossopharyngeal (CN IX)
  • Lead to the solitary nucleus in the medulla and
    then to the thalamus and gustatory cortex
    (perception) or limbic system via the
    hypothalamus

11
Vision
  • Accessory structures
  • Eyelids (palpabrae)
  • Eyelashes
  • Eyebrows
  • Lacrimal apparatus
  • Extrinsic eye muscles
  • Superior inferior rectus
  • Lateral medial rectus
  • Superior inferior obliques

12
Fig. 16.04
13
Fig. 16.05
14
The Eyeball
15
Fig. 16.06
16
Fig. 16.07
17
The retina
Fig. 16.08
18
Photoreceptors
Fig. 16.09
19
Fig. 16.10
20
The Optics of visionRefraction
21
Common vision defects and their correction
Fig. 16.12
22
Fig. 16.13
23
Fig. 16.14
24
Fig. 16.15
25
Fig. 16.16a,b
26
Fig. 16.16c, d
27
Fig. 16.17
28
Fig. 16.18
29
Fig. 16.19
30
Fig. 16.20a
31
Fig. 16.20b
32
Fig. 16.20c
33
Fig. 16.20d
34
Fig. 16.21
35
Fig. 16.22
36
Fig. 16.23
37
Fig. 16.24
38
Fig. 16.25
39
Fig. 16T01a
40
Fig. 16T01b
41
Fig. 16T01c
42
Fig. 16T01d
43
Fig. 16T01e
44
Fig. 16T01f
45
Fig. 16T02a
46
Fig. 16T02b
47
Fig. 16T02c
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