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Senses and Perception

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This binocular vision allows perception of 3D images and depth. Animals with eyes on the sides can detect motion in a wider field good for prey animals. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Senses and Perception


1
Senses and Perception
  • Lab 17

2
Organization of the Vertebrate Nervous System
  • Central nervous system (CNS) brain spinal
    cord.
  • Responsible for more complex reflexes and higher
    associative functions like learning memory.
  • Peripheral nervous system (PNS) motor and
    sensory neurons.

3
Organization of the Vertebrate Nervous System
  • Motor neurons carry impulses away from the CNS to
    effectors (muscles and glands).
  • Sensory neurons carry impulses from sensory
    receptors to the CNS.

4
Reflexes
  • A reflex produces a very fast motor response to a
    stimulus because the sensory neuron bringing
    information about the threat passes the
    information directly to the motor neuron.

5
Sensory Receptors
  • The sensory nervous system carries impulses to
    the CNS.
  • Sensory receptors are specialized sensory cells
    that detect changes in blood pressure, strain on
    ligaments, and smells in the air, among other
    things.
  • Complex sensory receptors made of many cell
    tissue types are called sensory organs.
  • Eyes, ears, taste buds.

6
Sensory Receptors
  • The brain can tell what kind of impulse is coming
    (light, sound, pain, etc) because the signal came
    from a particular type of receptor.
  • Light signals come from light receptors.

7
The Path of Sensory Information
  • There are many different kinds of sensory
    receptors.
  • Exteroceptors are receptors that sense stimuli
    that come from the external environment.
  • Interoceptors sense stimuli that come from inside
    the body.

8
Sensing Chemicals Taste
  • Taste taste buds embedded in the surface of the
    tongue contain taste receptor cells.
  • Chemicals from food dissolve in saliva and
    contact the taste cells.
  • Salty, sour, sweet, bitter chemicals are
    detected in different ways.

9
Sensing Chemicals Smell
  • Smell chemically sensitive neurons in the nose
    detect chemicals and transmit the information to
    the brain where smell information is processed
    analyzed.

10
Sensing Sounds Hearing
  • Hearing a sound involves detecting the vibrations
    of the air.
  • Waves of pressure in the air beat against the ear
    push the eardrum in out.
  • Three small bones on the other side of the
    eardrum increase the force of the vibration.

11
Sensing Sounds Hearing
  • The vibration crosses a second membrane to the
    fluid of the inner ear the cochlea.
  • The inner ear is connected to the throat by the
    eustachian tube to equalize pressure.

12
Sensing Sounds Hearing
  • The sound receptors occur in the cochlea.
  • When sound vibrations enter the cochlea, they
    send nerve impulses to the sensory neurons that
    travel to the brain.

13
Sensing Sounds Hearing
  • Sounds of different frequencies cause different
    parts of the membrane inside the cochlea to
    vibrate and fire different neurons.
  • Intensity is determined by how often the neurons
    fire.

14
Sensing Light Vision
  • Vision is the perception of light.
  • The eye is a special sensory organ that uses
    pigments in structures called rods and cones to
    absorb photons of light.

15
Structure of the Vertebrate Eye
  • Light passes through the transparent cornea which
    begins to focus light on the rear of the eye,
    then through the lens which completes the
    focusing.
  • The lens is suspended by ciliary muscles.

16
Structure of the Vertebrate Eye
  • The iris is a shutter that controls the amount of
    light entering the eye.
  • The pupil is the transparent zone in the center
    of the iris that gets larger in dim light and
    smaller in bright light.

17
Structure of the Vertebrate Eye
  • The light is focused by the lens onto the back of
    the eye.
  • An array of light sensitive receptor cells called
    the retina line the back of the eye.
  • Rods cones two types of receptor cells
    generate nerve impulses that pass along the optic
    nerve.

18
Structure of the Vertebrate Eye
  • Rods are very sensitive to light and can detect
    shades of gray in very dim light, but they do not
    detect color and the images are not sharp.
  • Cones detect colors and produce sharp images.

19
Color Vision
  • Three kinds of cone cells allow color vision.
  • Each has a different version of the opsin protein
    and so absorbs different wavelengths of light.
  • The brain compares relative intensities of the
    signals from the three types of cones.

20
Binocular Vision
  • Primates and most predators have two eyes facing
    forward, so the field of view overlaps.
  • This binocular vision allows perception of 3D
    images and depth.
  • Animals with eyes on the sides can detect motion
    in a wider field good for prey animals.
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