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Eyes and Gustation

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Eyes and Gustation By Kevin Tran, Spencer Ayres, Brandon Shaw, and Morgan Ciehanski – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eyes and Gustation


1
Eyes and Gustation
  • By Kevin Tran, Spencer Ayres, Brandon Shaw, and
    Morgan Ciehanski

2
Vision
  • We rely on our vision more than any other special
    sense
  • Visual receptors are located in the eye

3
Functions of accessory structures
  • Protection
  • Lubrication
  • Secretion of tears

4
Accessory structures of the eye
  • Superficial Epithelium of the Eye- thin layers of
    skin around the eye and covering the eye itself
  • Eyelashes- robust hairs that help prevent foreign
    materials from reaching the eye
  • Eyelids continuation of the skin that protect
    and lubricate the eye

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eyelashes
  • Located along the inner margin of the eye lid
  • Tarsal Glands- also known as Meibomian, are
    modified sebaceous glands
  • Tarsal glands secrete lipid-rich products that
    keep the eye lids from sticking together

7
Eyelids
  • Eyelids open and close eye using muscles fibers
  • Orbicularis Oculi and Levator Palpebrae
    Superioris muscles are responsible for closing
    the eye and raising the upper lid

8
Epithelium of the eye
  • Conjunctiva- outer surface of the eye that a
    mucous membrane covered in stratified squamous
    epithelium
  • Palpebral Conjunctiva- inner surface of the
    eyelid
  • Ocular Conjunctiva- the anterior surface of the
    eye
  • Cornea- a transparent part of the outer fibrous
    layer

9
Lacrimal apparatus
  • Lacrimal Apparatus- produces, distributes, and
    removes tears
  • Consists of
  • Lacrimal Gland and associated ducts
  • Lacrimal Canaliculi
  • Lacrimal Sac
  • Nasolacrimal Duct

10
Lacrimal apparatus
  • Lacrimal Gland- tear gland
  • Lacrimal Canaliculi- small canals that lead to
    the lacrimal sac
  • Lacrimal Sac- holds the tears that the lacrimal
    gland produces
  • Nasolacrimal Duct- delivers tears to the nasal
    cavity on that side

11
The eye
  • Sophisticated visual instruments
  • Contains three distinct layers or tunics
  • Outer Fibrous Tunic
  • Middle Vascular Tunic
  • Inner Neural Tunic (retina)

12
Fibrous tunic
  • Outermost layer
  • Consists of sclera and cornea
  • Sclera- white of the eye made of collagen and
    elastic fibers
  • Provides mechanical support and some physical
    protection
  • Serves as an attachment site for the eye muscles
  • Contains structures that assist in the focusing
    process

13
Vascular tunic
  • Also known as the Uvea
  • Contains blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, and
    the intrinsic muscles of the eye
  • Provides a route for blood vessels and lymphatics
    that supply tissues of the eye
  • Regulating the amount of light the eye receives

14
Vascular tunic
  • Secreting and reabsorbing the aqueous humor that
    circulates the eye
  • Controls the shape of the lens
  • Contains the iris
  • Visual receptors, or Photoreceptors, located in
    neural tunic

15
Iris
  • Iris- visible through the corneal surface,
    contains the blood vessels, pigment cells, and
    smooth muscle fibers
  • Pupillary muscles- muscles that contract and
    changes the diameter of the pupil
  • Pupil- central opening of the iris

16
Pupillary muscles
  • Pupillary Constrictor Muscles- when it contracts,
    the pupil decreases (more light)
  • Pupillary Dilator Muscles- contraction enlarges
    the pupil (less light)

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Neural Tunic
  • Also known as the Retina
  • Retina helps process visual information
  • Contains two parts pigmented part and neural
    part
  • Pigmented part absorbs light
  • Neural part is in control of processing
  • Also contains photoreceptors
  • Photoreceptors- cells that detect light

19
Organization of retina
  • Rods and cones
  • Rods- highly sensitive to light, dont see
    colors
  • Cones- sees colors, provide sharper clearer
    images
  • Optic Nerve- transmits the visual images picked
    up from the rods and cones and delivers them to
    the brain

20
Rods and cones
  • Macula Lutea- has no rods
  • Fovea- contains highest cone concentration
  • Fovea is the site of the sharpest vision

21
Structure of the eye
  • The eye is hollow
  • Two cavities
  • Posterior cavity
  • Anterior cavity is filled with aqueous humor

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Posterior cavity
  • Or Vitreous Chamber, contains the vitreous body
  • Vitreous Body- or Vitreous Humor, gelatinous
    substance that makes up most of the volume of the
    posterior cavity
  • Helps stabilize the shape of the eye

24
Anterior Cavity
  • Divided into two chambers
  • Anterior chamber
  • Posterior chambers
  • Chambers are filled with Aqueous Humor
  • Aqueous Humor- fluid that circulates within the
    anterior cavity, passing through the chambers of
    the pupil

25
Anterior chamber
  • Extends from the cornea to the iris

26
Posterior chamber
  • Extends between the iris and the lens

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lens
  • Lies posterior to the cornea
  • Primary function is to focus the visual image on
    the photoreceptors
  • Focus happens by the change in shape of the lens
  • Lens fibers are in the interior of the lens

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Lens fibers
  • Lost their nucleus and organelles
  • Slender and elongated
  • Filled with transparent proteins called
    crystallins
  • Crystallins- responsible for clarity and focusing
    power of the lens

31
transparency
  • Depends on precise combination of structural and
    biochemical characteristics
  • Lose of balance produces cataracts

32
refraction
  • The light that is collected by the photoreceptors
    in refracted, or bent when passing from one
    medium to another
  • Pencil in water
  • Refraction occurs when passing light through the
    cornea and then into the lens

33
refraction
  • Greatest amount of refraction occurs when light
    passes through the air into the corneal tissues
  • Tissues have a density similar to water
  • When you opne your eyes underwater you cant see
    as easily because the air-water refraction has
    been eliminated and replaced with water to water,
    thus light remains unbent and

34
Additional refraction
  • Light passes through the aqueous humor into the
    dense lens
  • This lens provides extra refraction thats needed
    to focus the light rays from an object to a focal
    point
  • Focal Point- a specific point of intersection of
    the retina

35
Focal distance
  • Focal Distance- distance between the center of
    the lens and its focal point
  • Determined by two factors
  • Distance from object to the lens
  • Shape of the lens

36
Distance from the object to the lens
  • The closer an object is to the lens, the greater
    the focal distance

37
The shape of the lens
  • The rounder the lens the more refraction occurs,
    so a very round lens has a shorter focal distance
    than a flatter one

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accommodation
  • Accommodation- focusing images on the retina by
    changing the shape of the lens to keep the focal
    length constant
  • To view nearby objects the lens becomes rounder
  • The lens flattens when we view a distant object
  • Lens are held in place by suspensory ligaments

40
accommodation
  • Greatest amount of refraction is needed for
    viewing objects up close
  • Inner limit of clear vision is called the near
    point of vision
  • Children can see things up close but as time goes
    on the lens becomes stiffer and less responsive
  • Aging effects the near point of vision

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Astigmatism
  • If light doesnt pass properly the image is
    distorted
  • Astigmatism- the degree of curvature in the
    cornea or lens varies from one axis to another
  • Image distortion may be so minimal people dont
    even notice the condition

43
Image reversal
  • Light originates at a single point either near or
    far
  • However and object in view is a complex light
    source that is treated as a large number of
    individual points
  • These individual points creates a miniature image
    of the original but is upside down and backwards
  • The brains compensates for this image reversal
    and we dont notice it

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Visual activity
  • Visual activity- clarity of vision
  • Rated against a normal standard (20/20, 20/15,
    etc.)
  • Considered legally blind when vision falls below
    20/200, even with glasses or contact lenses

46
blindness
  • Terms implies a total absence of vision due to
    damage of the optic pathways
  • Common causes are
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Cataracts
  • Glaucoma
  • Corneal scarring
  • Detachment of the retina
  • Hereditary factors

47
Scotomas
  • Abnormal blind spots that may appear in the field
    of vision
  • Permanent in a fixed position
  • Result from a compression of the optic nerve,
    damage to the photoreceptors, of damage to the
    visual pathway
  • Also Floaters, which a small spots that drift
    across the field of vision, generally temporary
    phenomena

48
Color vision
  • Objects appear to have color if they reflect or
    transmit photons from one portion of the visible
    spectrum and absorbs the rest
  • Photons stimulate rods and cones
  • Photons of all colors bounce off an object or
    rods themselves are stimulated, the object will
    appear white
  • If photons are absorbed by the object (none reach
    the retina), the object appears black

49
Cone types
  • Blue cones, green cones, and red cones
  • Each have a sensitivity to a different range of
    wavelengths
  • Stimulation to different combos of wavelength
    creates color vision
  • Color discrimination results from the integration
    of info from all three types of cones
  • EXAMPLE Yellow is formed from a combo of highly
    stimulate green cones, less strongly stimulated
    red cones, and relatively unaffected blue cones

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Color blindness
  • People who are unable to distinguish certain
    colors have a form of color blindness
  • Happens when one or more classes of cones aren't
    functional
  • Either lack of cones or unable to function
    properly
  • Most common type is red-green color blindness
    red cones are missing so a person cant tell the
    difference between red and green light

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Effects of Aging on the eye
  • Senile cataracts- lens loses transparency,
    blurred vision
  • Accommodation problems- the near point of vision
    gradually increases with age

54
Eye diseases
  • Conjunctivitis- or pinkeye, due to damage and/or
    irritation of the conjunctival surface
  • Cataract- balance in the lens becomes disturbed
    and the lens loses transparency they can result
    from injury, radiation, or reaction to drugs, as
    well as aging
  • Glaucoma- eye disease in which the optic nerve is
    damaged in a characteristic pattern

55
Professions dealing with the eye
  • Optometrist- concerned with the health of the
    eyes and related structures as well as vision,
    visual systems, etc. they are trained to fit
    lens to improve vision and diagnose and treat
    diseases of the eye
  • Ophthalmologist- a specialist in medical and
    surgical eye problems
  • Optician-use prescriptions written by an
    optometrist or an ophthalmologist to fit and sell
    eyeglasses, contact lenses and other eyewear

56
Taste
  • Special sense given to us by the tongue
  • Taste sensation(s) is due to the presence of
    taste receptors on the tongue

57
Taste buds
  • Made of specialized epithelial cells and taste
    receptors
  • Contain around 40 cells of different types/stages
  • Basal cells -gt Stem Cells in the tongue
  • Gustatory cells -gt Mature daughter cells, grow in
    stages
  • Around 3000 in the adult tongue

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Lingual papillae
  • Epithelial projections on the tongue
  • Three types Filiform Papillae, Fungiform
    Papillae, Circumvallate Papillae
  • Taste Buds located on the papillae

60
Filiform papillae
  • Do not contain taste buds
  • Provide friction to move things around the mouth

61
Fungiform papillae
  • A contain around five taste buds
  • A little bigger than filiform papillae

62
Circumvallate papillae
  • Can contain up to 100 taste buds
  • Largest of the three types of papillae
  • Forms a V at the back of the tongue

63
Gustatory discrimination
  • Four Primary sensations Sweet, sour, salty,
    bitter
  • Two less well known Umami Umami, Water
  • Different regions of the tongue are more prone to
    certain tastes than others
  • All sensations have same structure in the taste
    bud, just slightly different receptor mechanisms
  • Respond much more readily to unpleasant tastes
    than to pleasant

64
Taste receptor underpinnings
  • Dissolved chemicals bind to the receptor proteins
    in gustatory cell
  • Cell releases neurotransmitter, which generates
    action potential in nervous system

65
Aging on taste
  • With age, the number of functioning taste buds
    decreases, meaning youre less sensitive to
    various tastes
  • Number decreases dramatically after 50

66
Taste video link
  • http//bigthink.com/videos/from-tongue-to-brain-th
    e-neurology-of-taste
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