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Chapter Seven Nonvisual Sensation and Perception © Cengage Learning 2016 © Cengage Learning 2016 Audition: Sound as a Stimulus • Intensity: amplitude of sound wave – Vary from quiet whisper to rock band – Logarithmic scale of intensity (decibels, dB) • Frequency: wavelength of a sound wave – Determines pitch – Single frequency = pure tone – Multiple frequencies (timbre vs. noise) – Measured in cycles per second in units of Hertz (Hz) © Cengage Learning 2016 The Auditory World Differs Across Species © Cengage Learning 2016 Sound Results From the Collision of Molecules © Cengage Learning 2016 Sounds Vary Along the Dimensions of Amplitude, Frequency, and Complexity © Cengage Learning 2016 Intensity Levels of Common Sounds © Cengage Learning 2016 The Structure and Function of the Auditory System • The outer ear – Pinna; auditory canal • The middle ear – Tympanic membrane (eardrum) – Ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes) – Oval window • The inner ear – Semicircular canal; cochlea © Cengage Learning 2016 The Anatomy of the Ear © Cengage Learning 2016 The Cochlea • Three chambers – Vestibular canal (perilymph) – Tympanic canal (perilymph) – Cochlear duct (endolymph) • Organ of Corti (inner and outer hair cells) • Separated by membranes – Reissner’s membrane – Basilar membrane: tectorial membrane – Round window © Cengage Learning 2016 The Cochlea © Cengage Learning 2016 Sound Frequencies Are Translated by the Basilar Membrane © Cengage Learning 2016 The Movement of the Cilia Regulates Neurotransmitter Release by Hair Cells © Cengage Learning 2016 Central Auditory Pathways • Spiral ganglia neurons communicate with cochlear hair cells and the dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei of the medulla • Cochlear nuclei synapse directly or indirectly with the inferior colliculus • The inferior colliculus projects to the medial geniculate nucleus (MGN) of the thalamus © Cengage Learning 2016 The Auditory Cortex • The MGN projects to the primary auditory cortex • Primary auditory cortex – Columns respond to single frequencies • Secondary auditory cortex – Activated by complex stimuli – Separate pathways process the “what” and “where” of sound © Cengage Learning 2016 Auditory Pathways from the Cochlea to the Cortex © Cengage Learning 2016 Tonotopic Organization is Maintained by the Auditory Cortex © Cengage Learning 2016 Auditory Perception • Pitch perception – Tonotopic organization (place theory) – Temporal theory • Loudness perception – Decibel level describes physical qualities of sound stimulus – Loudness is the human perception of that stimulus – Equal loudness contours – Decibel range of auditory neurons © Cengage Learning 2016 Equal Loudness Contours © Cengage Learning 2016 Localization of Sound • Horizontal plane – Comparison of arrival times of sounds at each ear – Differences in intensities between each ear – Binaural neurons • Vertical plane – Pinna © Cengage Learning 2016 We Localize Sound by Comparing Arrival Times at Both Ears © Cengage Learning 2016 Hearing Disorders • Age-related hearing loss – Poor circulation to the inner ear; exposure to loud noise • Damage to outer or middle ear – Conduction loss due to wax build-up, infection, or otosclerosis – Treated with hearing aids • Damage to inner ear, auditory pathways, or auditory cortex – Treated with cochlear prosthetics © Cengage Learning 2016 Cochlear Prosthetics © Cengage Learning 2016 The Body Senses • The somatosensory system provides information related to: – The position and movement of the body – Touch – Skin temperature – Pain © Cengage Learning 2016 The Vestibular System • Movement receptors of the inner ear – Otolith organs • Utricle and saccule • Head position and linear acceleration – Semicircular canals • Rotation of the head © Cengage Learning 2016 The Vestibular Structures of the Inner Ear © Cengage Learning 2016 The Vestibular System • Central pathways – Axons from vestibular organs travel along auditory nerve to the cerebellum and vestibular nucleus – Axons from vestibular nucleus communicate with spinal cord and ventral posterior (VP) nucleus – VP nucleus projects to primary somatosensory cortex and primary motor cortex © Cengage Learning 2016 Touch • Skin structure – Hairy and glabrous (hairless) skin – Epidermis, dermis, subcutaneous tissue • Mechanoreceptors – Encapsulated: Meissner’s and Pacinian corpuscles – Nonencapsulated: Merkel’s disks and Ruffini’s endings – Free nerve endings – Two-point discrimination test © Cengage Learning 2016 Mechanoreceptors in the Skin © Cengage Learning 2016 Major Features of the Mechanoreceptors © Cengage Learning 2016 Two-Point Discrimination Thresholds © Cengage Learning 2016 The Four Classes of Sensory Axons Differ in Size and Speed © Cengage Learning 2016 Touch Pathways • Signals from mechanoreceptors travel from skin along Aβ axons to the dorsal roots of the spinal cord: dermatomes • From the spinal cord, axons travel along the dorsal column-medial lemniscal pathway to the dorsal column nuclei of the medulla © Cengage Learning 2016 Touch Pathways (cont’d.) • Axons from the dorsal column nuclei cross the midline to the contralateral ventral (VP) posterior nucleus of the thalamus, then project to the primary somatosensory cortex • Touch information from the head travels to the VP nucleus via the cranial nerves © Cengage Learning 2016 Dermatomes Are Areas of Skin Served by the Dorsal Roots of One Spinal Nerve © Cengage Learning 2016 Touch Pathways © Cengage Learning 2016 Somatosensory Areas of the Thalamus © Cengage Learning 2016 The Sensory Homunculus © Cengage Learning 2016 The Plasticity of Touch • Somatosensory cortex rearranges itself in response to changes in the amount of input it receives – Phantom pain – Referred sensations © Cengage Learning 2016 Somatosensory Disorders • Damage to the primary somatosensory cortex – Sensation and movement deficits • Damage to the secondary somatosensory cortex – Neglect syndrome © Cengage Learning 2016 Pain • A purpose for pain – Emotional, cultural, and experiential components – Relays information about tissue injury • Receptors for pain – Nociceptors – Mechanical injury, extreme temperature, and certain chemicals activate nociceptors © Cengage Learning 2016 Ascending Pain Pathways to the Brain • Ascending pain fibers – Myelinated Aδ (quick, sharp pain) – Unmyelinated C fibers (dull ache) – Glutamate and substance P • Spinal cord to the substantia gelatinosa to the spinothalamic pathway; synapse in the thalamus – Pain signals from head/neck travel along the trigeminal nerve, synapse in the spinal trigeminal nucleus; forms trigeminal lemniscus © Cengage Learning 2016 Ascending Pain Pathways to the Brain (cont’d.) • Spinothalamic and trigeminal lemniscus fibers synapse in VP nucleus or intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus • Communicate with the anterior cingulate cortex and somatosensory cortex • Gate theory of pain – Explains the effect of context on pain perception © Cengage Learning 2016 Ascending Pain Pathways © Cengage Learning 2016 Descending Pain Pathways to the Brain • Higher level brain structures project to the periaqueductal gray (PAG) of the midbrain • PAG projects to the raphe nuclei of the medulla and the spinal cord © Cengage Learning 2016 Descending Messages Influence Pain © Cengage Learning 2016 Managing Pain • Opioid activity • Periaqueductal gray (PAG) associated with cultural, emotional, and experiential influences on pain sensation © Cengage Learning 2016 The Chemical Senses: Olfaction • Sense of smell • Detection of airborne molecules • Olfactory receptors: bipolar – Line the olfactory epithelium in the dorsal nasal cavity – Olfactory neurons form the olfactory nerve – Molecules dissolve in mucus surrounding olfactory receptors – Depolarization sends action potentials to the olfactory bulb via the olfactory nerve © Cengage Learning 2016 Olfactory Pathways • Signals to the olfactory bulb are sorted by glomeruli • Olfactory bulb axons form olfactory tracts, project to the olfactory cortex – Does not synapse in thalamus first © Cengage Learning 2016 Olfactory Pathways (cont’d.) • Olfactory cortex connects to the medial dorsal nucleus of the thalamus, which projects to the insula and the orbitofrontal cortex • Olfactory signals are interpreted as odor identification, motivation, emotion, and memory © Cengage Learning 2016 Olfactory Information Travels from the Epithelium to the Brain © Cengage Learning 2016 The Chemical Senses: Gustation • Sense of taste – Protection from poisonous or spoiled food – Attraction to foods is necessary for survival • Dissolved chemicals in saliva • Five major taste classes – Sweet, sour, bitter, salty, umami © Cengage Learning 2016 Gustatory Receptors • Found on tongue and other areas of the mouth • Papilla contain taste buds • Taste buds have 50-150 receptor cells – Receptor cells are not neurons, but can form synapses – Microvilli project into saliva – Transduction mechanisms for chemical stimuli result in depolarization of taste receptor cells © Cengage Learning 2016 The Taste Receptors © Cengage Learning 2016 Gustatory Pathways • Taste fibers in tongue form parts of cranial nerves VII, IX, and X • Cranial nerves synapse with gustatory nucleus of the medulla © Cengage Learning 2016 Gustatory Pathways (cont’d.) • Axons from gustatory nucleus synapse in the ventral posterior medial (VPM) nucleus of the thalamus – Projects to the gustatory cortex in the parietal lobe for identification of primary taste qualities – Projects to the orbitofrontal cortex in the frontal lobe for combination with olfaction and vision to produce flavor perceptions © Cengage Learning 2016 Gustatory Pathways to the Brain © Cengage Learning 2016