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Download Hearing and Sound - County Central High School
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The Eye and the Ear Before we begin... What questions do you have about the eye? Write down a minimum of 2 questions in your notes. What about the ear? Again, write down a minimum of 2 questions in your notes. The Senses As we have learned, sensory neurons carry information from our internal and external environments to our CNS. Specialized sensory receptors transmit this information to sensory neurons. The Senses Light-sensitive receptors in the retina are stimulated by light. Specialized temperature receptors detect cold while other receptors detect heat. Specialized chemoreceptors in the blood detect CO2 levels The Senses Sensory receptors convert one source of energy into another. For example taste receptors convert chemical energy into an action potential (electrical energy). Sensory receptors tend to be grouped together within specialized sensory organs (eye, ear, etc.). The Senses The grouping of sensory receptors allows for summation to occur and threshold levels to be reached quicker. The Senses Despite an incredible collection of specialized sensory receptors, much of your environment remains undetected. What you detect are stimuli relevant to your survival. The Senses Sensory adaptation occurs when a receptor has become accustomed to a stimulus. This enables us to function in life without feeling every single stimulus on our skin all the time. Taste and Smell Taste receptors allow you to tell the difference between things that you can eat and things you can’t. These receptors are found in different placed depending on the species: - Humans - tongue - Octopus - tentacles Taste and Smell Each taste bud is then associated with a different taste. Structures of the Eye You have 20 minutes to fill in the structures of the eye chart. Use your textbook or your phones to find what the function of each structure is. Blind Spot Test Take the paper I have just handed out to you. Hold it up in front of you. Close your left eye and with your right eye, stare at the cross. Slowly move the paper towards and away from your face. The dot on the other side should disappear. This blind spot is where your optic nerve attaches to your retina. Try the other eye! Afterimage An afterimage is an image that appears in your vision even after the original image is gone. Take a look at the picture on the next slide. Look at the three dots on her nose until I tell you to stop. As soon as I say stop, look at a white piece of paper and blink quickly. What do you see? Chemistry of Vision The eye contains millions of rods and cones in the retina. Rods contain light sensitive pigments called rhodopsin. Cones contain similar pigments but are less sensitive to light. Chemistry of Vision When light hits a rhodopsin molecule, it divides into two components: - retinene: pigment portion - opsin: protein portion This division triggers an action potential that releases neurotransmitters transmitting information along the optic nerve Chemistry of Vision Rhodopsin breaks apart quickly in bright light and therefore works best in low light. This is why rods are referred to as your ‘black and white’ vision. Cones function better in bright light and allow you to see colour. Focusing on the Image When light enters the eye, it is bent by the cornea towards the pupil. The cornea directs light towards the lens, resulting in further bending. As it goes through the lens, the light is bent towards a focal point. Focusing on the Image Due to the light bending (refracting) twice, the image imprinted on the retina is inverted (upside down). Ciliary muscles attached to the lens change its shape to focus the light in different ways. Focusing on the Image Adjustment of the lens to things near and far is called accommodation. This accommodation changes as you get older. The lens hardens and it can’t be changed as easily leading to blurry vision. Focusing on the Image When images are viewed up close, the pupil constricts to bring the object into focus. The Inuit people were aware of this principle when they made eyeglasses by drilling holes in whale bones. Light through narrow openings results in sharper focus Vision Defects There are 5 different defects listed in your textbook (pages 453-454). Explain what they are and how they affect a person’s vision. How does someone become affected by each defect? Questions? Go back to your questions you made at the beginning of the notes. Have we answered them? Do you have new questions? Write them down if you do. The Ear Fill out the structures of the ear sheet that you have in your notes. Use your phone or your textbook to help you, you have 20 minutes. Hearing and Sound Sound is a form of energy that must be changed to electrical energy for us to interpret it. Hearing begins when sound waves push against the tympanic membrane. The vibrations are passed on to the ossicles. These three bones triple the force of the vibration. Hearing and Sound Muscles that connect the ossicles act as a safety net. When intense sound occurs, these muscles contract, lowering the amount of vibrations that can occur thereby lowering the impact on the inner ear. The ossicles pass the vibrations to the oval window causing it to push inward. As the oval window pushes in, the round window pushes out. Hearing and Sound This movement triggers waves of fluid within the inner ear. The cochlea receives the fluid and converts them to electrical impulses. The organ of Corti in the cochlea contains specialized hair cells anchored to the basilar membrane. Hearing and Sound The hair cells respond to vibrations. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xo9bwQuYrRo The movement of hair cells causes sensory nerves to be stimulated. Auditory information is then sent to the temporal lobe via the auditory nerves. Hearing and Sound Hearing and Sound The inner ear can identify both pitch and loudness. Close to the oval window, the basilar membrane is narrow and stiff. This is activated by high frequency waves registering high pitch sounds. Further from the oval window, the basilar membrane is more flexible registering low frequency sounds. Hearing and Sound Getting hit in the head hard can send vibrations through your ear that can be interpreted as sound. Hearing and Sound How well can you hear? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxcbppCX6Rk Equilibrium Balance consists of two components: static and dynamic equilibrium. Static equilibrium involves movement along one plane (horizontal/vertical) Dynamic equilibrium provides information during movement. Static Equilibrium Head position is monitored by two fluid filled sacs saccule and utricle Tiny hair cells line these sacs. Cilia from the hair cells are suspended in a gelatinous material that contains small calcium carbonate granules called otoliths. Static Equilibrium When the head moves, the otoliths brush against the cilia causing them to bend. The movement of cilia stimulates the sensory nerve, and information about head position is relayed to the cerebellum for interpretation. Static Equilibrium Dynamic Equilibrium While you are moving, balance is maintained by the three fluid filled semi-circular canals. Each canal contains a pocket called an ampulla that holds a cupula. Rotational stimuli cause the fluid to move bending cilia attached to hair cells in the cupulas. Dynamic Equilibrium Stimulation of hair cells sends impulses to the cerebellum. Rapid movement of fluid in the canals can cause motion sickness. Hearing Loss What are 2 ways that hearing loss can be treated? Use your phone and textbook to answer the question.