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SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM The senses collect information about the modality, intensity, duration, location of events in the world. The initial contact with the external world occurs through specialized neural structures: sensory receptors. Each receptor is sensitive to a form of physical energy, e.g. mechanical, chemical, electromagnetic energy. The receptors transform energy into electrical energy (common language for all sensory systems; a series of action potentials; neural encoding) which is called stimulus transduction. Sensory Receptors Convert Different Forms of Energy into Electrical Signals 1- We have sensors in our bodies that can detect heat, pressure, stretch, acceleration, sound, light, smells, tastes and other forms of energy 2- Sensory receptors act as transducers, converting many forms of energy into action potentials that the brain can interpret 3- Many receptors, such as those in the skin, are simply constructed; others, such as the eye and ear, are very elaborate The Type of Sensation Perceived Depends Upon Connection in Brain 1- Almost all sensory input passes through the thalamus but sensory action potentials in the thalamus look alike-it is impossible to tell the type of sensation by looking at the action potential 2- The type of sensation felt depends upon which part of the cortex the sensory nerve goes to 3- Presumably, if you were able to cut the auditory and optic nerves and reattach them to the wrong stumps, you should be able to hear the lightning and see the thunder A Stronger Stimulus Gives More Action Potentials per Minute (Frequency Coding) 1- Stimuli cause sensory receptors to depolarize and produce a voltage called a generator potential- this is not an action potential, it is not transmitted 2- The generator potential causes the sensory nerve to produce a series of action potentials that are sent to the brain 3- When a stimulus gets stronger you do not get bigger action potentials- that would violate the all-or-none principle 4- Instead you get more action potentials per minute 5- The brain knows that a higher frequency of action potentials (more per minute) means a stronger stimulus If a Stimulus is Continued Sensory Receptors Adapt & Become Less Sensitive 1- If a stimulus is maintained at a constant intensity for a long time the nerve seems to lose interest in it- the nerve has adapted and become less sensitive 2- This allows us to tune out background noise, to ignore the touch sensation from our clothing , to lose awareness of the temperature of the room, etc.. 3- Some nerves, such as those for pressure and touch, are fast-adapting; others, such as those for muscle stretch and some types of pain, are slow-adapting- the sensation lasts a long time 4- Example: temperature receptors 1- Two types: warm & cold receptors 2- If one hand is placed in warm water and the other is placed in cold water, the temperature receptors will adapt and become less sensitive 3- After adaptation, if both hands are placed in lukewarm water, the hand originally in warm water will feel cold, and the hand originally in cold water will feel warm Skin Sensations are Usually Perceived at the Location of the Receptor 1- Somatic (body) senses are perceived to be coming from the location of the sensory receptor 2- Sometimes the body is fooled: phantom limb painperson feels a limb which is no longer present 3- Skin sensations are quite complicated: 1- Merkel cells and Ruffini endings respond to steady pressure 2- Pacinian corpuscles and Meissner's corpuscles give the sense of vibration 3- There are separate warm and cold receptors 4- Receptors associated with skin hairs allow you to feel the displacement of hairs 5- Several types of pain receptors respond to mechanical trauma or very high or low temperatures 4- Uneven distribution of receptors: close together on finger tips & face; far apart on back, legs, arms, belly RECEPTORS RECEPTORS cover the surface of the body, and different dimensions of the world leave traces on them. Receptors convert energy into electrical activity. For different kinds of sensations, different kinds of receptor cells. Rod and cone cells of the eye's retina are specialized to respond to the electromagnetic radiation of light. The ear's receptor neurons are topped by hair bundles that move in response to the vibrations of sound. Olfactory neurons at the back of the nose respond to odorant chemicals that bind to them. Taste receptor cells on the tongue and back of the mouth respond to chemical substances that bind to them. Meissner's corpuscles are specialized for rapid response to touch, while free nerve endings bring sensations of pain. Modality Stimulus Receptor types Receptors -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Vision Light Photoreceptor Rods, Cones Audition Sound Mechanoreceptor Hair cells (cochlear) Balance Head motion Mechanoreceptor Hair cells (semicircular canals) Somatic Mechanical, Mechanoreceptor, eg. Meissner thermal, thermoreceptor, chemical chemoreceptor , pain receptor free nerves Taste Chemical Chemoreceptor Taste buds Smell Chemical Chemoreceptor Olfactory sensory neurons Each of the senses activates a separate area of the cerebral cortex, the sheet of neurons that makes up the outer layer of the brain's hemispheres. RECEPTIVE FIELD Receptive fields (RF). Receptors transfer their stimulation to the sensory areas of the brain through several neuronal connections. Neurons monitor the world by parceling it into small regions of space, known as receptive fields. RFs are defined in terms of single neurons. RF location is related to stimulus modality. Receptive fields of primary somatosensory cortical neurons are smallest on the fingers and become larger on the hand and forearm. RF size is defined by convergence convergence, and receptor density affects sensitivity and acuity (see figure below) [[[Name of the figure: convergence & receptive field_1]]] [[[Name of the figure: convergence & receptive field_2]]] [[[Description of the figure below: Two spots of light can be discriminated easily by non-converging pathways (right), while they might stay fused in one even at large interspot spacing when convergence occurs (left).]]] [[[Name of the figure : RF size varies]]] TWO-POINT DISCRIMINATION GENERAL PRINCIPLES general principal 1 all sensory info except for olfaction crosses over in the brain ·this info then passes to the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN: part of the thalamus) which is the first processing relay in the brain where info from different types of receptors is split up and passed on to the primary cortex- area 17 also known as the primary visual or striate cortex where the first simplistic analysis of information takes place general principal 2 all senses except olfaction first relay in the thalamus before padding onto the cortex ·this information is then passed onto surrounding areas of the cortex, secondary and tertiary visual areas (areas 18 and 19) where processing of more complex visual info takes place (color, movement, shape, binocularity( General Principal 3 all sensory info first passes to the primary cortex before being passed to higher cortical areas for assembly and then on to association areas ·where it is associated with other sensory information in order to form a complete representation of an object (looks like ice cream, smells like ice cream, tastes and feels like ice cream- and then it is identified, it must be ice cream) . Of course, as with other senses, there are other (older) pathways than the principal cortical one, but we will focus on the cortex General Principal 4 Transduction (Receptors) 1- The first step in turning a specific type of energy into an electrical signal differs between modalities, after that all systems follow similar principals. 2- in most sensory systems, physical energy (e.g. light) is changed (transduced) into neural impulses. The way that the system does this is dictated by the type of energy that is being transduced 3- transduction occurs in the sensory receptors 4- the receptor potential is produced by an opening of cation (Na+ and K+) channels similar to the synaptic potential. If sufficient these generate an action potential through the process of encoding, which is transmitted to second order projection neurons in the CNS. General principal 5 :Parallel pathways convey information 1- higher order sensory processing occurs in the cortex 2- with the exception of olfaction, sensory systems project to the thalamus prior to the cortex 3- the path by which sense information is transmitted to the cortex is called the sensory pathway or sensory tract 4- synapses along the way are called sensory relays 5- all sensory tracts (except olfaction) relay in the thalamus 6- all sensory systems terminate in a primary sensory region of the cortex ================= FINIS =============== Dr Mahmoud Ahmad Fora