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Sensory Systems:

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Sensory Systems: Touch, temperature, taste, smell There are a variety of touch receptors Touch receptors send signals to the somatosensory cortex via long axons in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sensory Systems:


1
Sensory Systems
  • Touch, temperature, taste, smell

2
There are a variety of touch receptors
3
  • Touch receptors send signals to the somatosensory
    cortex via long axons in the spinal cord
  • Signals are sent to the opposite (contralateral)
    side of the brain

4
The Homunculus
  • Wilder Penfield - Montreal Neurological Institue
    - 1940s
  • Found somatotopic map by stimulating brain during
    surgery

5
Touch Discrimination
  • Two-point discrimination threshold- How far apart
    do the points have to be to be perceived as two
    points?

Skin
Receptors
To Brain
6
Touch Discrimination
  • Two-point discrimination threshold varies
    dramatically across the skin surface
  • Where is it smallest? Where is it largest?

7
Touch Discrimination
  • Two-point discrimination threshold varies
    dramatically across the skin surface
  • Where is it smallest? Where is it largest?
  • Best (smallest) threshold is on finger tips,
    tounge, and face
  • Worst (largest) threshold is on legs and back

8
Touch Discrimination
  • Cortical representation correlates with two-point
    discrimination threshold

9
Thermoception
  • Two classes of thermoreceptors warm and cold

10
Taste (Gustation)
Taste buds contain chemical receptors
11
Taste
What are the various tastes?
12
Taste
  • Multi-dimensional scaling reveals several
    varieties of tastes
  • sweet
  • salt
  • bitter
  • sour
  • umami (MSG) - protein receptor?
  • fat receptor?

13
Taste is Relative
  • What you taste depends critically on what
    youve recently been tasting
  • taste receptors adapt and reduce firing over time
  • for example eating something salty reduces the
    perceived saltiness of subsequent foods

14
Smell
  • Olfactory bulb receives input from olfactory
    receptors which contact mucus in nasal cavity

15
Smell
  • There are thousands of different receptors for
    different kinds of molecules

16
Smell
  • Olfactory receptors use a lock-and-key
    mechanism - only specific molecules will bind
    with a given receptor

Odor Molecules
Receptor
17
Smell
  • Odor recognition is excellent in humans
  • but odor identification (naming) is very poor
  • Women tend to be (slightly) better than men at
    naming smells

18
Smell
  • Smell is strongly influenced by top-down
    processes such as what you are expecting to smell

19
Pheromones
  • Pheromones are not smells
  • Pheromones are chemical signals sent from one
    animal to another

20
Pheromones
  • Pheromones either induce a behavior in another
    animal or cause some physiological change
  • Very common in insects...not so common in
    mammals...unclear role in humans

21
Fun Facts about Pheremones
  • For example Alpha Androstenol, found in male pig
    saliva, causes a female pig to allow the male to
    mate with her

22
Fun Facts about Pheremones
  • Alpha androstenol is also found in the sweat of
    human males!
  • Does alpha androstenol (or pheromones in general)
    affect humans?
  • Design an (ethical) experiment

23
Fun Facts about Pheremones
  • Kirk-Smith Booth (1980) sprayed some of the
    seats in a dentists waiting room with alpha
    androstenol
  • Compared to a control condition, more women used
    the alpha androstenol seat

24
Fun Facts about Pheremones
  • Fewer men used the alpha androstenol seat !

25
Pheromones
  • Other possible ways in which pheromones influence
    humans
  • synchronization of menstrual cycles
  • mate selection - attraction to opposite major
    histocompatibility complex

26
Pheromones
  • Pheromones do not control behavior!
  • Human behavior is largely under top-down
    influences, but may be affected subtly by
    pheromones
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