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Senses Senses  Perceive environment  Find food  Avoid predators  Avoid danger  Find shelter  Interact socially Sensory Receptors  Mechanoreceptors  Touch, hearing, equilibrium, pressure  Thermoreceptors  Radiant energy, infrared  Nociceptors  Pain  Chemoreceptors  Smell, taste  Osmoreceptors  Water, solute concentration  Photoreceptors  Light, vision Sensory Receptors  Sensory receptor  Nerve pathway  Brain integration  Sensory perception Sensory Receptors  Receptors specific for given stimulus  Strong stimulation  Greater frequency of action potentials  Greater number of neurons  Sensory adaptaion  Frequency of AP decrease or stop w/ constant simulus Somatic  Start at sensory neurons  Different sensors to different part of brain  Somatosensory cortex Somatic  Body surface  Free nerve endings  Meissner corpuscles  Pacinian corpuscles  Thermoreceptors   Bulb of Krause Ruffini endings Somatic  Muscles  Mechanorecptors    Motion Position in space Stretch Somatic  Pain—perception of injury  Nociceptors  Somatic—skin, skeletal muscle, joints, tendons  Visceral—internal organs   Fewer nocieptors “Referred” pain  Cell damage releases bradykinins  Bradykinins stimulate nearby nociceptors  Stimulus perceived by brain as pain Olfaction  Smell  Social communication  Find mates  Find prey  Avoid predators Olfaction  Well-developed in most mammals  Especially carnivores & ungulates  Non-existent in cetaceans (whales, dolphins, etc.)  Canines 100,000-1 million times better than humans  Bloodhounds 10-100 million times Olfaction  Poorly developed in most birds  Well-developed in fish  Salmon—ID and return to home streams  Catfish—ID others, maintain social order Olfaction  Chemicals inhaled  Must be dissolved in liquid (mucus)  Binds to membrane proteins  Triggers depolarization of neurons  Different combinations of receptor activation recognized as patterns by brain Olfaction Olfaction  Pheromones  Air-borne chemical that triggers behavioral response in same species  Alarm  Food trail  Sex  Territorial Taste  Differentiate nutrition vs. noxious  Receptors on various organs  Antennae  Tentacles  Tongue  Legs Taste  Five tastes in humans  Sweet  Sour  Salty  Bitter  Umami Chemoreceptors  Antennae  Most arthropods  Multiple functions   Smell & taste most important Also touch, air motion, vibration, heat  Olfactory receptors bind to odor molecules  Sends signal to antennal lobe in brain Chemoreceptors  Vomeronasal organ  Many animals (including humans)  Certain smells  Many pheromones  May be involved in triggering some aggression & mating Chemoreceptors  Vomeronasal organ  Flehmen response  In cat  In deer Hearing  Detect vibrations  Interpret as sound  Amplitude (loudness)  Frequency (pitch)  Important for communication  Important for finding prey  Important for avoiding predators Hearing  Sonic—human frequencies  15 Hz-20,000 Hz  Best at 2,000-4,000 Hz  Ultrasonic—above human frequencies  Bats, dogs  Subsonic—below human frequencies  Snakes (sense through bellies)  Whales, giraffes, elephants (communication) Hearing  External ear (pinna)  Collects sound  Middle ear  Ossicles    Malleus (hammer) Incus (anvil) Stapes (stirrup)  Receive vibrations from tympanum (eardrum)  Transmit to inner ear  Inner ear  Cochlea—auditory nerves  Semicircular canals—balance Hearing  ,,, Hearing  Vibrations coming down ear vibrate ossicles  Stapes vibration pushes on oval membrane on cochlea  Fluid in cochlea moves at specific frequency  Fluid wave moves tectorial membrane  Movement of tectorial membrane stimulates nerve impulse Hearing  ,,, Hearing  Equilibrium  Vestibular organs (semicircular canals)  Static equilibrium   Linear movement of head Otolithic membrane movement triggers hairs  Dynamic equilibrium   Rotation, acceleration, deceleration Fluid bends hairs in crista ampullaris Hearing  Echolocation  Dolphis, shrews, bats, most whales  Active sonar  Sounds sent out  Hear reflection of sounds (echo)  Able to triangulate sounds “Hearing”  Lateral line  Detect vibrations in water  Along sides of many fish  Similar to certain aspects of hearing & equilibrium Vision  Photoreceptors  Part of brain that can interpret pattern of nerve impulses  Pigment molecules absorb incoming photons  Convert photons into action potential Vision  Invertebrate  Simple     Photosensitive receptors Do not form images Light & dark Ocellus Vision  Invertebrate  Compound        Arthropods Multiple facets Each has own lens & photoreceptor cells Very sensitive to motion 360o field of vision Multiple images integrated in brain Poor image resolution Vision  Invertebrate  Mollusks    Many have lens eyes (similar to vertebrates) Cephalopods have most developed Hunters, 3 dimensions, often move fast Vision  Vertebrate  Outer layer   Sclera Cornea  Middle Layer  Lens  Iris  Pupil  Choroid  Aqueous Humor  Vitreous Humor Vision  Inner layer  Retina   Macula lutea Optic disc  Tapetum Lucidum Vision  Rods  Low light  Night vision  No color  Cones  Bright light  Day vision  Color Vision  Accommodation—the process by which an eye changes to keep an object in focus as it moves closer or further away.  Fish, reptiles—Lens moves forwards & backwards in eye  Birds, mammals—ciliary muscles change shape of lens. Vision  Photons enter through cornea  Are focused by lens  Absorbed by cells in retina  Photon activity stimulates receptors to generate action potential Vision  Eye placement  Forward-facing   Predators Depth perception  Side-facing   Prey Wide field of vision Other Senses  Electroception  Detect electrical fields  Sharks, skates, rays  Lungfish, coelacanths, sturgeons  Monotremes (especially platypus)  Active—generate own field   Electric eels & fish Communication  Passive—sense other fields  Chondrichthyes Other Senses  Magnetoception  Mostly birds  Very important to migration  Some bees  Detect magnetic fields  Magnetite  Found in many rocks & minerals  Source of iron ore  Identified in brains of birds, bees, and humans  When magnetite aligns w/ Earth’s magnetic field, stimulates nerve impulse  Poorly understood sense
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            