Sensory Systems: Vision Hearing Taste Smell Equilibrium Somatic Senses
Sensory Systems: Vision Hearing Taste Smell Equilibrium Somatic Senses
Sensory Systems: Vision Hearing Taste Smell Equilibrium Somatic Senses
• Vision
• Hearing
• Taste
• Smell
• Equilibrium
• Somatic Senses
Sensory Systems
• Somatic sensory
• General – transmit impulses from skin, skeletal muscles,
and joints
• Special senses - hearing, balance, vision
• Visceral sensory
• Transmit impulses from visceral organs
• Special senses - olfaction (smell), gustation (taste)
Properties of Sensory Systems
Figure 16.8
Internal Chambers and Fluids
• Anterior segment
• Divided into anterior and posterior chambers
• Anterior chamber – between the cornea and iris
• Posterior chamber – between the iris and lens
• Filled with aqueous humor
• Renewed continuously
• Formed as a blood filtrate
• Supplies nutrients to the lens and cornea
Internal Chambers and Fluids
• The lens and ciliary zonules divide the eye
• Posterior segment (cavity)
• Filled with vitreous humor - clear, jelly-like substance
• Transmits light
• Supports the posterior surface of the lens
• Helps maintain intraocular pressure
Accessory Structures of the Eye
• Eyebrows – coarse hairs on
the superciliary arches
• Eyelids (palpebrae)
• Separated by the palpebral
fissure
• Meet at the medial and
lateral angles (canthi)
• Conjunctiva – transparent
mucous membrane
• Palpebral conjunctiva
• Bulbar (ocular) conjunctiva
• Conjunctival sac
• Moistens the eye
Figure 16.5a
Accessory Structures of the Eye
• Lacrimal apparatus –
keeps the surface of the
eye moist
• Lacrimal gland –
produces lacrimal fluid
• Lacrimal sac – fluid
empties into nasal
cavity
Figure 16.5b
Extrinsic Eye Muscles
• Six muscles that control movement of the eye
• Originate in the walls of the orbit
• Insert on outer surface of the eyeball
Figure 16.6a, b
Visual Pathways to the Cerebral Cortex
• Pathway begins at the retina
• Light activates photoreceptors
• Photoreceptors signal bipolar cells
• Bipolar cells signal ganglion cells
• Axons of ganglion cells exit eye as the optic nerve
Vision Integration / Pathway
• Optic nerve
• Optic chiasm
• Optic tract
• Thalamus
• Visual cortex
• Other pathways
include the midbrain
and diencephalon
Figure 10-29b, c: Neural pathways for vision and the papillary reflex
The Ear: Hearing and Equilibrium
Figure 16.17
The Inner (Internal) Ear
• Inner ear – also called the
labyrinth
• Bony labyrinth – a cavity
consisting of three parts
• Semicircular canals
• Vestibule
• Cochlea
• Bony labyrinth is filled
with perilymph
The Membranous Labyrinth
• Membranous labyrinth - series of membrane-walled sacs and ducts
• Fit within the bony labyrinth
• Consists of three main parts
• Semicircular ducts
• Utricle and saccule
• Cochlear duct
• Filled with a clear fluid – endolymph
Figure 16.18
The Cochlea
• A spiraling chamber in the bony labyrinth
• Coils around a pillar of bone – the modiolus
• Spiral lamina – a spiral of bone in the modiolus
• The cochlear nerve runs through the core of the modiolus
The Cochlea
• The cochlear duct (scala media) – contains receptors for hearing
• Lies between two chambers
• The scala vestibuli
• The scala tympani
• The vestibular membrane – the roof of the cochlear duct
• The basilar membrane – the floor of the cochlear duct
The Cochlea
• The cochlear duct (scala media) – contains receptors for
hearing
• Organ of Corti – the receptor epithelium for hearing
• Consists of hair cells (receptor cells)
The Role of the Cochlea in Hearing
Figure 16.20
Auditory Pathway from the Organ of Corti
• The ascending
auditory pathway
• Transmits
information from
cochlear receptors
to the cerebral
cortex
Figure 16.23
The Vestibule
• Utricle and saccule – suspended in perilymph
• Two egg-shaped parts of the membranous labyrinth
• House the macula – a spot of sensory epithelium
• Macula – contains receptor cells
• Monitor the position of the head when the head is still
• Contains columnar supporting cells
• Receptor cells – called hair cells
• Synapse with the vestibular nerve
Anatomy and Function of the Maculae
Figure 16.21b
The Semicircular Canals
• Lie posterior and lateral to the vestibule
• Anterior and posterior semicircular canals lie in the vertical plane at
right angles
• Lateral semicircular canal lies in the horizontal plane
The Semicircular Canals
• Semicircular duct – snakes through each semicircular canal
• Membranous ampulla – located within bony ampulla
• Houses a structure called a crista ampullaris
• Cristae contain receptor cells of rotational acceleration
• Epithelium contains supporting cells and receptor hair cells
Structure and Function of the Crista
Ampullaris
Figure 16.22b
The Chemical Senses: Taste and Smell
• Taste – gustation
• Smell – olfaction
• Receptors – classified as chemoreceptors
• Respond to chemicals
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
Figure 16.2
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