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Somatic and sensor analyzer. How to classify sensory receptors? A. Energy transduced Chemoreceptors Taste buds, olfactory receptors, aortic and carotid bodies Photoreceptors Rods and cones in retina Thermoreceptors Heat and cold Mechanoreceptors Touch and pressure B. By the type of stimulus Sensory neurons transmit specific signals; require “adequate stimulus” to do so Classification by Location Exteroceptors – sensitive to stimuli arising from outside the body Located at or near body surfaces Include receptors for touch, pressure, pain, and temperature Monitor a variety of stimuli Located in musculoskeletal organs Interoceptors – (visceroceptors) receive stimuli from internal viscera Proprioceptors – monitor degree of stretch C. Type of sensory information delivered Proprioreceptors Within muscles; at joints (position and movement) Cutaneous receptors In skin:touch and pressure; heat and cold; pain Special sensory organs Eyes, ears, olfactory, taste buds Extero- and interoreceptors External and internal stimuli Lots of overlap! Sensory adaptation Phasic (fastadapting) and tonic (slow-adapting) receptors Note different firing patterns Stimulation pattern resembles EPSPs Cutaneous receptors What is a somatesthetic sensation? From cutaneous and proprioreceptors Myelinated sensory neurons extend all the way to medulla oblongata; crossing over Always extends to postcentral gyrus Referred pains along same pathway Modulating cutaneous sensations Receptive field: density of receptors Some body areas Lateral inhibition helps “pinpoint” sensation or increase acuity Applies to other senses in addition to touch Somatic Senses General somatic – include touch, pain, vibration, pressure, temperature Proprioceptive – detect stretch in tendons and muscle provide information on body position, orientation and movement of body in space Location of pathway terminations video Smell and Taste • Smell aka Olfaction (Latin olfacere) • Taste aka Gustation (Latin gustare) • Minor Senses - Really? • Chemical Senses • Smell and Taste very closely related to each other Where does smell figure? In humans • Strong link to sense of taste • Strong link to emotional states • Exploited by commercials/marketing • Used for identification of gender • Pheromones - signal sexual arousal or a readiness for mating Basics: What do you need for smell? • Odorous Substance • Airborne • Perceptual system that can parse or segregate the information in airborne odorant molecules Smell (Olfaction) Olfactory epithelium with olfactory receptors, supporting cells, basal cells Olfactory receptors are modified neurons Surfaces are coated with secretions from olfactory glands Olfactory reception involves detecting dissolved chemicals as they interact with odorant binding proteins Olfactory Receptors Bipolar sensory neurons located within olfactory epithelium Dendrite projects into nasal cavity, terminates in cilia Axon projects directly up into olfactory bulb of cerebrum Olfactory bulb projects to olfactory cortex, hippocampus, and amygdaloid nuclei Categorizing Smell • Aristotle: Pungent, Succulent, Acid and Astringent • Hennings Smell Prism • Based on verbal descriptors of smell • Multidimensional Scaling (MDS) • Subjects rate only the similarity of odor-pairs • Consistent arrangement in an N-dimensional space MDS Eugenol (cloves) Propionic acid (sweaty socks) Methyl Salicylate (cloves) Acetic acid (vinegar) Vanillin Aldehyde C14 (flowers) Nitrobenzene (almonds) Scatole (feces) Citronelli (lemons) Turpentine Hydrogen Sulfide (rotten eggs) Physiology • Nasal Cycle • Olfactory Epithelium • Olfactory Receptor Cells (Complete Neurons) • Free Nerve Endings • Olfactory Nerve (Axons of the ORCs) Physiology contd. Olfactory Receptor Cells have cilia Cilia are bathed in mucous Mucous contains Odorant binding proteins (OBP) OBP transmits the odorant molecules from the air to receptor sites on the cilia Olfactory Pathways Neural Representations Very little known • No odorotopic map found. • All cells fire for all odors but form different patterns different odors => Population code. • Other complications: Change in intensity leads to increase in the firing rate of neurons but triggers changes in the perceived quality of the odorant. Odor Perception Odor (as well as taste) are much more phenomenological than vision or audition. • Odor Detection • Very good: Mercaptan 1 part per 50 billion parts of air. • Varies greatly from odor to odor (molecular properties) • Varies with a variety of other factors • Time of day, Age and Gender Smoking in injurious to odor detection! • Odor Identification • Much worse • Shows context dependence • Varies once again with age and gender Odor Identification • Determined by Gender •Women vastly superior • Can be improved with practise - benefits both genders • Stimulus Saliency • Infants and mothers can recognize each other by smell alone • Infants hedonic reactions to smell develops with age • Odor Familiarity - Seen in elderly people Smoking is injurious to odor identification! Some more amazing facts • Odor Constancy • Natural sniffs lead to constant odor perception but artificial blowing of air does not • Common Chemical Sense • Odors judged pleasant at moderate concentrations are judged unpleasant at high concentrations • Related to the action of free nerve endings - stimulated in an indiscriminate manner • Warning system for the organism • Adaptation - Adapt to a particular odor • Cross Adaptation: Adapt to a different odor • Could have led to odor categorization but turns out that cross-adaptation is not symmetric! Disorders of Smell Anosmia or “Odor Blindness” • Often caused by a blow to the head • Temporary since ORCs can regenerate • Sometimes can be total but in that case is specific to certain odors, e.g. sweat, urine • Anosmia can have serious consequences such as loss of apetite and weight Taste – Gustation Taste receptors Occur in taste buds Most are found on the surface of the tongue Located within tongue papillae Two types of papillae (with taste buds) Fungiform papillae Circumvallate papillae Taste Buds Collection of 50 –100 epithelial cells Contain three major cell types (similar in all special senses) Supporting cells Gustatory cells Basal cells Contain long microvilli – extend through a taste pore Taste Sensation and the Gustatory Pathway Four basic qualities of taste Sweet, sour, salty, and bitter A fifth taste – umami, “deliciousness” No structural difference among taste buds Gustatory Pathway from Taste Buds Taste information reaches the cerebral cortex Primarily through the facial (VII) and glossopharyngeal (IX) nerves Some taste information through the vagus nerve (X) Sensory neurons synapse in the medulla Located in the solitary nucleus Figure 16.2