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GLOBAL EDITION Physiology of Behavior TWELFTH EDITION Neil R. Carlson • Melissa A. Birkett Carlson • Birkett VP, Product Development: Dickson Musslewhite Senior Acquisitions Editor: Amber Chow Editorial Assistant: Stephany Harrington Director, Content Strategy and Development: Brita Nordin Development Editor: Thomas Finn Director, Project Management Services: Lisa Iarkowski Project Team Lead: Denise Forlow Project Manager: Shelly Kupperman Project Manager, Global Edition: Sudipto Roy Senior Acquisitions Editor, Global Edition: Sandhya Ghoshal Senior Project Editor, Global Edition: Daniel Luiz Manager, Media Production, Global Edition: M. Vikram Kumar Senior Manufacturing Controller, Production, Global Edition: Trudy Kimber Program Team Lead: Amber Mackey Program Manager: Cecilia Turner Director of Field Marketing: Jonathan Cottrell Senior Product Marketing Manager: Lindsey Prudhomme Gill Executive Field Marketing Manager: Kate Stewart Marketing Assistant, Field Marketing: Amy Pfund Marketing Assistant, Product Marketing: Frank Alarcon Operations Manager: Mary Fischer Operations Specialist: Carol Melville Associate Director of Design: Blair Brown Interior Design: Kathryn Foot Cover Design: Lumina Datamatics, Inc. Cover Art: © allnow/Shutterstock Associate Digital Product Manager:: Christopher Fegan Digital Studio Project Manager: Pamela Weldin Digital Studio Team Lead: Peggy Bliss Full-Service Project Management and Composition: Cenveo® Publisher Services Acknowledgments of third party content appear on page 702, which constitutes an extension of this copyright page. Chapter Opener captions: Ch. 1: The human nervous system contains billions of neurons; Ch. 2: Neurons are the cells of the nervous system that are specialized for communication; Ch. 3: The structures of the human nervous system are made up of billions of neurons that make trillions of synapses; Ch. 4: Cross-section of the vagus nerve of the peripheral nervous system; Ch. 5: Neurons in the cortex labeled with a fluorescent dye; Ch. 6: Cross-section of a retina. Photoreceptor cells are visible at the top of the image; Ch. 7: Confocal microscopy image of neurons (green) and glia (red) in the vestibular pathway; Ch 8: Cross-section of the cerebellum; Ch. 9: Cross-section of the hypothalamus of a mouse; Ch. 10: Cross-section of the pituitary gland (left) attached to the hypothalamus (right); Ch. 11: Example of pyramidal neurons found in the hippocampus; Ch. 12: Color-enhanced transmission electron micrograph of portions of two adipose cells and associated connective tissue in a rat; Ch. 13: New neurons in the mouse hippocampus are labeled with green fluorescence; Ch. 14: Scanning electron microscope image of a neuron in the cortex; Ch. 15: Neurons derived from mouse embryonic stem cells. Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, a dopamine-synthesizing enzyme) is labeled in red; TH-containing neurons degenerate in Parkinson’s disease; green labels a protein that’s found in all neurons; blue labels the nuclei of all cells; Ch. 16: Neurons in the mouse hippocampus; Ch. 17: Cross-section of the adrenal medulla; Ch. 18: Neurons in the CA1 region of the hippocampus from a transgenic mouse stained for the CB1 cannabinoid receptor (red) and cell nuclei (blue). Pearson Education Limited Edinburgh Gate Harlow Essex CM20 2JE England and Associated Companies throughout the world Visit us on the World Wide Web at: www.pearsonglobaleditions.com © Pearson Education Limited 2017 The rights of Neil R. Carlson and Melissa A. Birkett to be identified as the authors of this work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Authorized adaptation from the United States edition, entitled Physiology of Behavior, 12th edition, ISBN 978-0-13-408091-8, by Neil R. Carlson and Melissa A. Birkett, published by Pearson Education © 2017. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a license permitting restricted copying in the United Kingdom issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, Saffron House, 6–10 Kirby Street, London EC1N 8TS. All trademarks used herein are the property of their respective owners. The use of any trademark in this text does not vest in the author or publisher any trademark ownership rights in such trademarks, nor does the use of such trademarks imply any affiliation with or endorsement of this book by such owners. ISBN 10: 1-292-15810-7 ISBN 13: 978-1-292-15810-5 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 14 13 12 11 10 Typeset in Palatino LT Pro by Cenveo® Publisher Services Printed and bound by Vivar in Malaysia. Audition, the Body Senses, and the Chemical Senses aware of the information received from these organs. This section describes the vestibular apparatus and the vestibular pathway in the brain. Anatomy of the Vestibular Apparatus LO 7.11 Identify the structures of the vestibular apparatus. The vestibular system has two components: the vestibular sacs and the semicircular canals. They represent the second and third components of the labyrinths of the inner ear. (We just studied the first component, the cochlea.) The vestibular sacs respond to the force of gravity and inform the brain about the head’s orientation. The semicircular canals respond to angular acceleration—changes in the rotation of the head—but not to steady rotation. They also respond (but rather weakly) to changes in position or to linear acceleration. Figure 7.19 shows the labyrinths of the inner ear, which include the cochlea, the semicircular canals, and the two vestibular sacs: the utricle (“little pouch”) and the saccule (“little sack”). The semicircular canals approximate the three major planes of the head: sagittal, transverse, and horizontal. Receptors in each canal respond maximally to angular acceleration in one plane. The semicircular canal consists of a membranous canal floating within a bony one; the membranous canal contains a fluid called endolymph. An enlargement called the ampulla contains the organ in which the sensory receptors reside. The sensory receptors are hair cells similar to those found in the cochlea. Their cilia are embedded in a gelatinous mass called the cupula, which blocks part of the ampulla. To explain the effects of angular acceleration on the semicircular canals, we will first describe an “experiment.” If we place a glass of water on the exact center of a turntable and then start the turntable spinning, the water in the glass will, at first, remain stationary (the glass will move with respect to the water it contains). Eventually, however, the water will begin rotating with the container. If we then stop the turntable, the water will continue spinning for a while because of its inertia. The semicircular canals operate on the same principle. The endolymph within these canals, like the water in the glass, resists movement when the head begins to rotate. This inertial Figure 7.19 Receptive Organ of the Semicircular Canals Semicircular canals Vestibular sacs (utricle and saccule) Semicircular canals Vestibular nerve Cochlea Section of ampulla 221 Cupula Filled with endolymph Hair cells Axons of ampullary nerve 222 Chapter 7 Figure 7.20 Receptive Tissue of the Vestibular Sacs: The Utricle and the Saccule Efferent axon Hair cell Vestibular nerve Semicircular canals Filamentous base Afferent axon Otoconia Utricle Saccule Supporting cell Otolithic membrane resistance pushes the endolymph against the cupula, causing it to bend, until the fluid begins to move at the same speed as the head. If the head rotation is then stopped, the endolymph, still circulating through the canal, pushes the cupula the other way. Angular acceleration is thus translated into bending of the cupula, which exerts a shearing force on the cilia of the hair cells. (Of course, unlike the glass of water in the example, we do not normally spin around in circles; the semicircular canals measure very slight and very brief rotations of the head.) With this explanation in mind, what might be responsible for the perception of movement after a person stops spinning? The vestibular sacs (the utricle and saccule) work very differently. These organs are roughly circular, and each contains a patch of receptive tissue. The receptive tissue is located on the “floor” of the utricle and on the “wall” of the saccule when the head is in an upright position. The receptive tissue, like that of the semicircular canals and cochlea, contains hair cells. The cilia of these receptors are embedded in an overlying gelatinous mass, which contains something rather unusual: otoconia, which are small crystals of calcium carbonate. (See Figure 7.20.) The weight of the crystals causes the gelatinous mass to shift in position as the orientation of the head changes. Thus, movement produces a shearing force on the cilia of the receptive hair cells. The hair cells of the semicircular canal and vestibular sacs are similar in appearance. Each hair cell contains several cilia, graduated in length from short to long. These hair cells resemble the auditory hair cells found in the cochlea, and their transduction mechanism is also similar: A shearing force of the cilia opens ion channels, and the entry of potassium ions depolarizes the ciliary membrane. All three forms of hair cells employ the same receptor molecules: TRPA1, Cilia which we described earlier in this chapter. Figure 7.21 shows two views of a hair cell of a bullfrog saccule made by a scanning electron microscope. The Vestibular Pathway LO 7.12 Outline the vestibular pathway. The vestibular and cochlear nerves constitute the two branches of the eighth cranial nerve (auditory nerve). The bipolar cell bodies that give rise to the afferent axons of the Figure 7.21 Saccular Hair Cells These scanning electron microscope views of hair cells of a bullfrog saccule show (a) an oblique view of a normal bundle of vestibular hair cells and (b) a top view of a bundle of hair cells from which the longest has been detached. (From Hudspeth, A. J., and Jacobs, R., Stereocilia mediate transduction in vertebrate hair cells, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 1979, 76, 1506–1509. Reprinted with permission.) (a) (b) Audition, the Body Senses, and the Chemical Senses vestibular nerve (a branch of the eighth cranial nerve) are located in the vestibular ganglion, which appears as a nodule on the vestibular nerve. Most of the axons of the vestibular nerve synapse within the vestibular nuclei in the medulla, but some axons travel directly to the cerebellum. Neurons of the vestibular nuclei send their axons to the cerebellum, spinal cord, medulla, and pons. There also appear to be vestibular projections to the temporal cortex, but the precise pathways have not been determined. Most investigators believe that the cortical projections are responsible for feelings of dizziness; the activity of projections to the lower brain stem can produce the nausea and vomiting that accompany motion sickness. Projections to brain stem nuclei controlling neck 223 muscles are clearly involved in maintaining an upright position of the head. Perhaps the most interesting connections are those to the cranial nerve nuclei (third, fourth, and sixth) that control the eye muscles. As we walk or (especially) run, the head is jarred. The vestibular system exerts direct control on eye movement to compensate for the sudden head movements. This process, called the vestibulo-ocular reflex, maintains a fairly steady retinal image. Test this reflex yourself: Look at a distant object and hit yourself (gently) on the side of the head. Note that your image of the world jumps a bit but not too much. People who have suffered vestibular damage and who lack the vestibuloocular reflex have difficulty seeing anything while walking or running. Everything becomes a blur of movement. Section Review Vestibular System LO 7.11 Identify the structures and functions of the vestibular apparatus. The vestibular apparatus contains the vestibular sacs (the utricle and saccule) and the semicircular canals of the ear. The vestibular sacs respond to the force of gravity and inform the brain about the head’s orientation. The semicircular canals respond to angular acceleration and changes in position or linear acceleration. LO 7.12 Outline the vestibular pathway. From the hair cells, vestibular information is relayed to the brain via the vestibular and cochlear nerves. The vestibular nerve projects to the medulla, which sends information to cerebellum, spinal cord, pons, and to other regions of Somatosenses This chapter began with the case of Ashlyn, who had a congenital lack of functional pain receptors. This case highlights the important role of somatosenses in influencing our behavior. The somatosenses provide information about what is happening on the surface of our body and inside it. The cutaneous senses (skin senses) are the most studied of the somatosenses and include several submodalities commonly referred to as touch. Proprioception and kinesthesia provide information about body position and movement. We will describe the contribution of sensory receptors in the skin to these perceptual systems in this section. The muscle receptors and their role in feedback from limb position and movement are discussed in this section and in Chapter 8. The organic senses arise from receptors in and around the internal organs. (See Table 7.2.) the medulla. The cranial nerve relays information to the eye muscles to compensate for sudden head movements. There also appear to be vestibular projections to the temporal cortex, but the precise pathways have not been determined. Thought Question Persistent dizziness has a lifetime prevalence of approximately 25 percent and represents a significant risk factor for falls among older adults. Select one structure involved in vestibular perception and explain how damage or dysfunction in this structure could contribute to the experience of dizziness (even if the exact cortical pathways are not yet known). Table 7.2 Somatosenses Somatosense Function Cutaneous Senses Provide information from the surface of the body. Proprioception Provide information about location of body in space. Kinesthesia Provide information about movement of body though space. Organic Senses Provide information from in and around internal organs. The Stimuli LO 7.13 Provide examples of stimuli that activate receptors for the somatosenses. The cutaneous senses respond to several different types of stimuli: pressure, vibration, heating, cooling, and events that cause tissue damage (and hence pain). Feelings of pressure 224 Chapter 7 environment by the skin’s outer layers. The skin participates in thermoregulation by producing sweat, thus cooling the body, or by restricting its circulation of blood, thus conserving heat. Its appearance varies widely across the body, from mucous membrane to hairy skin to the smooth, hairless skin of the palms and the soles of the feet, which is known as glabrous skin. Skin consists of subcutaneous tissue, dermis, and epidermis and contains various receptors scattered throughout these layers. Glabrous skin contains a dense, complex mixture of receptors, which reflects the fact that we use the palms of our hands and the inside surfaces of our fingers to actively explore the environment: We use our hands and fingers to hold and touch objects. In contrast, the rest of our body most often contacts the environment passively; that is, other things come into contact with it. Figure 7.22 shows the appearance of free nerve endings and the four types of encapsulated somatosensory receptors (Merkel’s disks, Ruffini corpuscles, Meissner’s corpuscles, and Pacinian corpuscles). The locations and functions of these receptors are listed in Table 7.3. Figure 7.22 Cutaneous Receptors LO 7.14 Describe the anatomy and somatosensory receptors of the skin. The skin is a complex and vital organ of the body—one that we often tend to take for granted. We cannot survive without it; extensive skin burns are fatal. Our cells, which must be bathed by a warm fluid, are protected from the hostile Glabrous Skin Hairy Skin Ruffini corpuscles Sweat gland Epidermis Anatomy of the Skin and Its Receptive Organs Hair Free nerve endings Merkel's disks Meissner’s corpuscle Pacinian corpuscle Dermis are caused by mechanical deformation of the skin. Vibration occurs when we move our fingers across a rough surface. Thus, we use vibration sensitivity to judge an object’s roughness. Sensations of warmth and coolness are produced by objects that raise or lower skin temperature. Sensations of pain can be caused by many different types of stimuli, but it appears that most cause at least some tissue damage. One source of kinesthesia is the stretch receptors found in skeletal muscles that report changes in muscle length to the central nervous system. Receptors within joints between adjacent bones respond to the magnitude and direction of limb movement. However, the most important source of kinesthetic feedback appears to come from receptors that respond to changes in the stretching of the skin during movements of the joints or of the muscles themselves, such as those in the face (Johansson and Flanagan, 2009). Muscle length detectors, located within the muscles, do not give rise to conscious sensations; their information is used to control movement. These receptors will be discussed separately in Chapter 8. We are aware of some of the information received by means of the organic senses, which can provide us with unpleasant sensations such as stomachaches or gallbladder attacks, or pleasurable ones such as those provided by a warm drink on a cold winter day. We are unaware of some information, such as that provided from receptors in the digestive system, kidneys, liver, heart, and blood vessels that are sensitive to nutrients and minerals. This information, which plays a role in the control of metabolism and water and mineral balance, is described in Chapter 12. Subcutaneous fat Artery Vein Table 7.3 Categories of Cutaneous Receptors Size and Nature of Receptive Field Identity of Receptor Location of Receptor Function of Receptor Small, sharp borders Merkel’s disks Hairy and glabrous skin Detection of form and roughness, especially by fingertips Large, diffuse borders Ruffini corpuscles Hairy and glabrous skin Detection of static force against skin; skin stretching; proprioception Small, sharp borders Meissner’s corpuscles Glabrous skin Detection of edge contours; Braille-like stimuli, especially by fingertips Large, diffuse borders Pacinian corpuscles Hairy and glabrous skin Detection of vibration; information from end of elongated object being held, such as tool Hair follicle ending Base of hair follicle Detection of movement of hair Free nerve ending Hairy and glabrous skin Detection of thermal stimuli (coolness or warmth), noxious stimuli (pain), tickle Free nerve ending Hairy skin Detection of pleasurable touch from gentle stroking with soft object Audition, the Body Senses, and the Chemical Senses Perception of Cutaneous Stimulation LO 7.15 Describe receptors involved in the perception of touch, temperature, pain, and itch. The three most important qualities of cutaneous stimulation are touch, temperature, and pain. These qualities, along with itch, are described in the sections that follow. Stimuli that cause vibration in the skin or changes in pressure against it (tactile stimuli) are detected by mechanoreceptors—the encapsulated receptors shown in Figure 7.22 and some types of free nerve endings. Most investigators believe that the encapsulated nerve endings serve only to modify the physical stimulus transduced by the dendrites that reside within them. But what is the mechanism of transduction? How does movement of the dendrites of mechanoreceptors produce changes in membrane potentials? It appears that the movement causes ion channels to open, and the flow of ions into or out of the dendrite causes a change in the membrane potential. You will recall that TRPA1, a member of the TRP (transient receptor potential) family of receptor proteins, is responsible for transduction of mechanical information in auditory and vestibular hair cells. Most information about tactile stimulation is precisely localized—that is, we can perceive the location on our skin where we are being touched. However, a case study by Olausson et al., (2002) discovered a new category of tactile sensation. Read the case study below to learn more about a unique case of cutaneous stimulation. TOuCH Patient G. L., a 54-year-old woman, experienced a permanent loss of afferent neurons involved in somatosensation. G. L. lost the ability to perceive tickle but retained the ability to perceive temperature, pain, and itch (Olausson et al., 2002, pp. 902–903). When the hairy skin on her forearm or the back of her hand was stroked with a soft brush, she reported a faint, pleasant sensation. However, she could not determine the direction of the stroking or its precise location. An fMRI analysis showed that this stimulation activated the insular cortex, a region that is known to be associated with emotional responses and sensations from internal organs. The somatosensory cortex was not activated. When regions of hairy skin of control participants were stimulated this way, fMRI showed activation of the primary and secondary somatosensory cortex as well as the insular cortex because the stimulation activated both large and small axons. The glabrous skin on the palm of the hand is served only by large-diameter, myelinated axons. When this region was stroked with a brush, G. L. reported no sensation at all, presumably 225 because of the absence of small, unmyelinated axons. The investigators concluded that, besides conveying information about noxious and thermal stimuli, smalldiameter unmyelinated axons constitute a “system for limbic touch that may underlie emotional, hormonal and affiliative responses to caresslike, skin-to-skin contact between individuals” (Olausson et al., 2002, p. 900). And, as we saw, G. L. could no longer perceive tickle. Tickling sensations, which were previously believed to be transmitted by these small axons, are apparently transmitted by the large, myelinated axons that were destroyed in patient G. L. Olausson and his colleagues (Löken et al., 2009) note that the sensory endings that detect pleasurable stroking are found only in hairy skin, and that stroking of glabrous skin does not provide these sensations. However, we can think of pleasurable tactile stimuli that can be experienced through the glabrous skin of the palms and fingers—for example, those provided by stroking a warm, furry animal or touching a loved one. When our hairy skin contacts the skin of another person, it is more likely that that person is touching us. In contrast, when our glabrous skin contacts the skin of another person, it is more likely that we are touching them. Thus, we might expect receptors in hairy skin to provide pleasurable sensations when someone caresses us but expect receptors in glabrous skin to provide pleasurable sensations when we caress someone else. Our cutaneous senses are often used to analyze shapes and textures of stimulus objects that are moving with respect to the surface of the skin. Sometimes, the object itself moves, but more often, we do the moving ourselves. If an object is placed in your palm and you are asked to keep your hand still, you will have a great deal of difficulty recognizing the object by touch alone. If you are then allowed to move your hand, you will manipulate the object, letting its surface slide across your palm and the pads of your fingers. You will be able to describe the object’s three-dimensional shape, hardness, texture, slipperiness, and so on. In order to describe it, your motor system must cooperate, and you need kinesthetic sensation from your muscles and joints, in addition to the cutaneous information. If you squeeze the object and feel a lot of well-localized pressure in return, it is hard. If you feel a less intense, more diffuse pressure in return, it is soft. If it produces vibrations as it moves over the ridges on your fingers, it is rough. If very little effort is needed to move the object while pressing it against your skin, it is slippery. If it does not produce vibrations as it moves across your skin, but moves in a jerky fashion, and if it takes effort to remove your fingers from its surface, it is sticky. Thus, our somatosenses work dynamically with the motor system to provide