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The Other Senses Module 12 1 Sensation Overview The Other Senses Hearing Touch Pain Taste Smell Body Position and Movement 2 Hearing / Audition The Stimulus Input: Sound Waves Sound waves are compressing and expanding air molecules in the atmosphere. 3 Sound Wave 4 Frequency (Pitch) Frequency (pitch): Determined by the wavelength of sound. 5 Frequency of Sound Waves • The frequency of a sound wave is measured as the number of cycles per second (Hertz) – 20,000 Hz – 4,186 Hz – 1,000 Hz – 100 Hz – 27 Hz Highest Frequency we can hear Highest note on a piano Highest pitch of human voice Lowest pitch of human voice Lowest note on a piano 6 Intensity (Loudness) Intensity (Loudness): Amount of energy in a wave, determined by the amplitude, relates to the perceived loudness. 7 Loudness of Sound Richard Kaylin/ Stone/ Getty Images 120dB 8 70dB Characteristics of Sound Waves Maximum level of industrial noise considered safe Pain Threshold 0 db 20 Whisper Absolute threshold of human hearing 40 60 80 Normal conversation Quiet office 100 City bus Noisy automobile 120 Loud thunder or rock concert 140 160 180 Rocket launch Subway 9 The Ear Dr. Fred Hossler/ Visuals Unlimited Link Shepherds ascending scale 10 11 Hairs in the inner ear 12 13 14 The Ear Outer Ear/Pinna: Collects and sends sounds to the eardrum. Middle Ear: Chamber between eardrum and cochlea containing three tiny bones (hammer, anvil, stirrup) that concentrate the vibrations of the eardrum on the cochlea’s oval window. Inner Ear: Innermost part of the ear, containing the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs. 15 Cochlea Cochlea: Coiled, bony, fluid-filled tube in the inner ear that transforms sound vibrations to auditory signals. 16 Transduction of Sounds • The structures of the ear transform changes in air pressure (sound waves) into vibrations of the Basilar Membrane • As the Basilar Membrane vibrates it causes the hairs in the Hair Cells to bend • The bending of the hairs leads to a change in the electrical potential within the cell 17 Localization of Sounds Because we have two ears, sounds that reach one ear faster than the other ear cause us to localize the sound. 1. Intensity differences 2. Time differences 18 Audition Conduction Hearing Loss hearing loss caused by damage to the mechanical system that conducts sound waves to the cochlea Nerve Hearing Loss hearing loss caused by damage to the cochlea’s receptor cells or to the auditory nerve 19 Audition Amplitude required for perception relative to 20-29 year-old group Older people tend to hear low frequencies well but suffer hearing loss for high frequencies 1 time 10 times 100 times 1000 times 32 64 128 256 512 1024 2048 4096 8192 16384 Frequency of tone in waves per second 20 Low Pitch High Phonemic Restoration Our Brains fill in for us • Subjects asked to listen to a recording with a transcript and indicate where the recording was obscured by a cough. • All subjects reported hearing the cough • 19/20 said there was not missing text (the one person got the wrong phoneme) • Le(COUGH)latures Link Auditory Illusions 21 22 Chemical and Body Senses Overview • • • • • • Touch and temperature Pain Gustation (taste) Olfaction (smell) Kinesthetic (location of body) Vestibular (balance) 23 Touch Bruce Ayers/ Stone/ Getty Images The sense of touch is a mix of four distinct skin senses—pressure, warmth, cold, and pain. 24 Rubber hand illusion Link 3.13 25 Pain Pain tells the body that something has gone wrong. Usually pain results from damage to the skin and other tissues. A rare disease exists in which the afflicted person feels no pain. AP Photo/ Stephen Morton Ashley Blocker (right) feels neither pain nor extreme hot or cold. Link 4:23 Link 1:39 26 Pain • Nerve endings in body act as nocioceptors – Pain gates regulate pain signals in 3 areas • Brain stem – gate-control theory of pain • Spinal cord • Peripheral regulation of pain – Phantom limbs • Up to 70% of amputees experience this Ramachandran link for phantom limbs 9:24-17:43 27 Human Diversity: Culture and Pain • Bariba society – cultural emphasis on pain – Tolerate pain easily – Calm response to pain is part of Bariba pride – Pregnant women don’t show labor pain reaction, experience labor pain and birth alone 28 Gate-Control Theory Melzack and Wall (1965, 1983) proposed that our spinal cord contains neurological “gates” that either block pain or allow it to be sensed. Gary Comer/ PhototakeUSA.com 29 Gate control animation 30 Pain Control Pain can be controlled by a number of therapies including, drugs, surgery, acupuncture, exercise, hypnosis, and even thought distraction. Todd Richards and Aric Vills, U.W. ©Hunter Hoffman, www.vrpain.com 31 32 Taste Traditionally, taste sensations consisted of sweet, salty, sour, and bitter tastes. Recently, receptors for a fifth taste have been discovered called “Umami”. Sweet Sour Taste link at Nova Blocking bitter taste at Nova Salty Bitter Umami (Fresh Chicken) 33 Receptor cells Pore Surface of tongue Taste Bitter Sour Salty Sweet and fatty Sensory nerve fiber 34 Taste on TED 35 There are several types of papillae 36 Taste • Your sensitivity to taste will decline if you: – Smoke heavily – Consume large amounts of alcohol – Grow older – Picky eating may be adaptive at PBS 37 Taste and Cognition • What you THINK about a food can change how you perceive it! • $90 Btl. Wine rated as better than $10 wine…. • The twist….they were both the same wine • Our taste experience is subjective. “Studies have indeed shown that when wines are tasted blind there is little correlation between a wines taste and its cost, but that there is strong correlation when the wines are not sampled blind.” 38 Link Beer tasting 5:26 Taste • Culture and taste preferences: http://http://www.travelchannel.com/TV_Shows/Bizarre_Foods /Video/Andrew_Eats_Raw_Camel_Kidney_In_Ethiopia http://www.travelchannel.com/TV_Shows/Anthony_Bourdain 39 Bouba - Kiki 40 Sensory Interaction When one sense affects another sense, sensory interaction takes place. So, the taste of strawberry interacts with its smell and its texture on the tongue to produce flavor. Ramachandran on synesthesia 17:43 – 23:38 McGurk effect on Youtube Synesthesia professor funk 4:37 41 So how might you test this… • Do you see the triangle? 42 People with number color synesthesia can much quicker than you…. 43 Smell/Olfaction Like taste, smell is a chemical sense. Odorants enter the nasal cavity to stimulate 5 million receptors to sense smell. Unlike taste, there are many different forms of smell. 44 Chemical Senses: The Flavors and Aromas of Life • Olfaction – Olfactory epithelium – top of nasal cavity – Pheromone detection of sweat and urine • Vomeronasal organ • Influence human female reproductive cycles • Inhalation of male sex hormone and mood changes • Males may respond to sex hormones 45 Olfactory nerve to brain Olfactory epithelium Nasal cavity 46 Age, Sex and Sense of Smell Number of correct answers Women and young adults have best sense of smell 4 Women 3 Men 2 0 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 Age Group 70-79 80-89 90-99 47 Smell and Memories The brain region for smell (in red) is closely connected with the brain regions involved with memory (limbic system). That is why strong memories are associated with odor. 48 Body Position and Movement The sense of our body parts’ position and movement is called kinesthesis. The vestibular sense monitors the head (and body’s) position. http://www.heyokamagazine.com Whirling Dervishes Wire Walk 49 EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Edition in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University, Lahey, Amy Jones, Bernstein, McGraw Hill w/ Garber edits Worth Publishers, © 2008 50