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SENSES for anaphy and physiology subject
SENSES for anaphy and physiology subject
HannaSumalinog
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Sep 20, 2025
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About This Presentation
all about senses
Size:
2.92 MB
Language:
en
Added:
Sep 20, 2025
Slides:
95 pages
Slide Content
Slide 1
Special senses arethe sensory functions that use specialized sense
organs to detect specific stimuli and convert them into nerve impulses
for the brain to interpret.
SPECIAL
SENSES
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 2
Special Senses
▪Special senses include:
▪Smell
▪Taste
▪Sight
▪Hearing
▪Equilibrium
▪Special sense receptors
▪Large, complex sensory organs
▪Localized clusters of receptors
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 3
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 4
Part I: The Eye and Vision
▪70 percent of all sensory receptors are in the
eyes
▪Each eye has over 1 million nerve fibers carrying
information to the brain
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 5
Anatomy of the Eye
▪Accessory structures include the:
▪Extrinsic eye muscles
▪Eyelids
▪Conjunctiva
▪Lacrimal apparatus
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 6
Figure 8.1 Surface anatomy of the eye and accessory structures.
Site where
conjunctiva
merges with
cornea
Palpebral
fissure
Lateral
commissure
(canthus)
Iris
Eyelid
Eyebrow
Eyelid
Eyelashes
Pupil
Lacrimal
caruncle
Medial
commissure
(canthus)
Sclera
(covered by
conjunctiva)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 7
External and Accessory Structures
▪Eyelids
▪Meet at the medial and lateral commissure (canthus)
▪Eyelashes
▪Tarsal glands produce an oily secretion that lubricates
the eye
▪Ciliary glands are located between the eyelashes
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 8
External and Accessory Structures
▪Conjunctiva
▪Membrane that lines the eyelids and eyeball
▪Connects with the transparent cornea
▪Secretes mucus to lubricate the eye and keep it moist
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 9
External and Accessory Structures
▪Lacrimal apparatus = lacrimal gland + ducts
▪Lacrimal gland—produces lacrimal fluid (tears);
situated on lateral end of each eye
▪Tears drain across the eye into the lacrimal canaliculi,
then the lacrimal sac, and into the nasolacrimal duct,
which empties into the nasal cavity
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 10
External and Accessory Structures
▪Tears contain:
▪Dilute salt solution
▪Mucus
▪Antibodies
▪Lysozyme (enzyme that destroys bacteria)
▪Function of tears
▪Cleanse, protect, moisten, lubricate the eye
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 11
Figure 8.2a Accessory structures of the eye.
Lacrimal
gland
Excretory duct
of lacrimal gland
Conjunctiva
Anterior
aspect
Eyelid
Eyelashes
Tarsal
glands
(a) Eyelid
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 12
Figure 8.2b Accessory structures of the eye.
Lacrimal
gland
Excretory ducts
of lacrimal gland
Lacrimal sac
Lacrimal canaliculus
Nasolacrimal duct
Inferior meatus
of nasal cavity
Nostril
(b)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 13
External and Accessory Structures
▪Extrinsic eye muscles
▪Six muscles attach to the outer surface of the eye
▪Produce gross eye movements
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 14
Figure 8.3a Extrinsic muscles of the eye.
Superior
oblique muscle
Superior
oblique tendon
Superior
rectus muscle
Conjunctiva
Lateral rectus
muscle
Optic
nerve
(a)
Inferior
rectus
muscle
Inferior
oblique
muscle
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 15
Figure 8.3b Extrinsic muscles of the eye.
Trochlea
Superior
oblique muscle
Superior
oblique tendon
Superior
rectus muscle
Axis at
center of
eye
Inferior
rectus muscle
Medial
rectus muscle
Lateral
rectus muscle
(b)
Common
tendinous ring
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 16
Figure 8.3c Extrinsic muscles of the eye.
(c)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 17
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Three layers, or tunics, form the wall of the
eyeball
▪Fibrous layer: outside layer
▪Vascular layer: middle layer
▪Sensory layer: inside layer
▪Humors are fluids that fill the interior of the
eyeball
▪Lens divides the eye into two chambers
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 18
Figure 8.4a Internal anatomy of the eye (sagittal section).
Sclera
Ciliary body
Ciliary zonule
Cornea
Iris
Pupil
Aqueous
humor
(in anterior
segment)
Lens
Scleral venous sinus
(canal of Schlemm)
Vitreous humor
(in posterior segment)
(a)
Choroid
Retina
Fovea centralis
Optic nerve
Central artery
and vein of
the retina
Optic disc
(blind spot)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 19
Figure 8.4b Internal anatomy of the eye (sagittal section).
Ciliary body
Iris
Margin
of pupil
Aqueous humor
(in anterior
segment)
Lens
Cornea
Ciliary zonule
(b)
Vitreous humor
in posterior
segment
Retina
Choroid
Sclera
Fovea centralis
Optic disc
Optic nerve
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 20
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Fibrous layer = sclera + cornea
▪Sclera
▪White connective tissue layer
▪Seen anteriorly as the “white of the eye”
▪Cornea
▪Transparent, central anterior portion
▪Allows for light to pass through
▪Repairs itself easily
▪The only human tissue that can be transplanted without
fear of rejection
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 21
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Vascular layer
▪Choroid is a blood-rich nutritive layer that contains a
pigment (prevents light from scattering)
▪Choroid is modified anteriorly into two smooth muscle
structures
▪Ciliary body
▪Iris—regulates amount of light entering eye
▪Pigmented layer that gives eye color
▪Pupil—rounded opening in the iris
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 22
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Sensory layer
▪Retina contains two layers
1.Outer pigmented layer absorbs light and prevents it
from scattering
2.Inner neural layer contains receptor cells
(photoreceptors)
▪Rods
▪Cones
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 23
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Sensory layer (continued)
▪Electrical signals pass from photoreceptors via a two-
neuron chain
▪Bipolar neurons
▪Ganglion cells
▪Signals leave the retina toward the brain through the
optic nerve
▪Optic disc (blind spot) is where the optic nerve leaves
the eyeball
▪Cannot see images focused on the optic disc
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 24
Figure 8.5a The three major types of neurons composing the retina.
Pigmented
layer of retina
Rod
Cone
Bipolar
cells
Ganglion
cells
(a)
Pathway
of light
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 25
Figure 8.5b The three major types of neurons composing the retina.
Pigmented
layer of
retina
Central
artery
and vein
of retina
Neural layer
of retina
Optic disc
(b)
Optic
nerve
Choroid
Sclera
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 26
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Sensory layer (continued)
▪Rods
▪Most are found toward the edges of the retina
▪Allow vision in dim light and peripheral vision
▪All perception is in gray tones
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 27
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Sensory layer (continued)
▪Cones
▪Allow for detailed color vision
▪Densest in the center of the retina
▪Fovea centralis–lateral to blind spot
▪Area of the retina with only cones
▪Visual acuity (sharpest vision) is here
▪No photoreceptor cells are at the optic disc, or blind
spot
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 28
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Sensory layer (continued)
▪Cone sensitivity
▪Three types of cones
▪Each cone type is sensitive to different wavelengths of
visible light
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 29
Figure 8.6 Sensitivities of the three cone types to different wavelengths of visible light.
Visible light
Light absorption by cone populations
420 nm
(blue cones)
530 nm
(green cones)
560 nm
(red cones)
400 450 500 550 600 650700
Wavelength (nanometers)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 30
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Lens
▪Flexible, biconvex crystal-like structure
▪Held in place by a suspensory ligament attached to the
ciliary body
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 31
Figure 8.4a Internal anatomy of the eye (sagittal section).
Sclera
Ciliary body
Ciliary zonule
Cornea
Iris
Pupil
Aqueous
humor
(in anterior
segment)
Lens
Scleral venous sinus
(canal of Schlemm)
Vitreous humor
(in posterior segment)
(a)
Choroid
Retina
Fovea centralis
Optic nerve
Central artery
and vein of
the retina
Optic disc
(blind spot)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 32
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Lens divides the eye into two chambers
1.Anterior (aqueous) segment
▪Anterior to the lens
▪Contains aqueous humor, a clear, watery fluid
2.Posterior (vitreous) segment
▪Posterior to the lens
▪Contains vitreous humor, a gel-like substance
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 33
Figure 8.4a Internal anatomy of the eye (sagittal section).
Sclera
Ciliary body
Ciliary zonule
Cornea
Iris
Pupil
Aqueous
humor
(in anterior
segment)
Lens
Scleral venous sinus
(canal of Schlemm)
Vitreous humor
(in posterior segment)
(a)
Choroid
Retina
Fovea centralis
Optic nerve
Central artery
and vein of
the retina
Optic disc
(blind spot)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 34
Figure 8.4b Internal anatomy of the eye (sagittal section).
Ciliary body
Iris
Margin
of pupil
Aqueous humor
(in anterior
segment)
Lens
Cornea
Ciliary zonule
(b)
Vitreous humor
in posterior
segment
Retina
Choroid
Sclera
Fovea centralis
Optic disc
Optic nerve
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 35
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Aqueous humor
▪Watery fluid found between lens and cornea
▪Similar to blood plasma
▪Helps maintain intraocular pressure
▪Provides nutrients for the lens and cornea
▪Reabsorbed into venous blood through the scleral
venous sinus, or canal of Schlemm
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 36
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Vitreous humor
▪Gel-like substance posterior to the lens
▪Prevents the eye from collapsing
▪Helps maintain intraocular pressure
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 37
Internal Structures: The Eyeball
▪Ophthalmoscope
▪Instrument used to illuminate the interior of the eyeball
and fundus (posterior wall)
▪Can detect diabetes, arteriosclerosis, degeneration of
the optic nerve and retina
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 38
Figure 8.7 The posterior wall (fundus) of the retina as seen with an ophthalmoscope.
MaculaFovea
centralis
Blood
vessels
Optic disc
Lateral Medial
Retina
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 39
Physiology of Vision
▪Pathway of light through the eye and light
refraction
▪Light must be focused to a point on the retina for
optimal vision
▪Light is bent, or refracted, by the cornea, aqueous
humor, lens, and vitreous humor
▪The eye is set for distant vision (over 20 feet away)
▪Accommodation—the lens must change shape to
focus on closer objects (less than 20 feet away)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 40
Figure 8.8 Relative convexity of the lens during focusing for distant and close vision.
Retina
Light from distant source
(a)
Light from near source
Focal point
Focal point
Retina
(b)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 41
Physiology of Vision
▪Pathway of light through the eye and light
refraction (continued)
▪Image formed on the retina is a real image
▪Real images are:
▪Reversed from left to right
▪Upside down
▪Smaller than the object
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 42
Figure 8.9 Real image (reversed left to right, and upside down) formed on the retina.
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 43
Physiology of Vision
▪Visual fields and visual pathways to the brain
▪Optic nerve
▪Bundle of axons that exit the back of the eye carrying
impulses from the retina
▪Optic chiasma
▪Location where the optic nerves cross
▪Fibers from the medial side of each eye cross over to
the opposite side of the brain
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 44
Physiology of Vision
▪Visual fields and visual pathways to the brain
(continued)
▪Optic tracts
▪Contain fibers from the lateral side of the eye on the
same side and the medial side of the opposite eye
▪Synapse with neurons in the thalamus
▪Optic radiation
▪Axons from the thalamus run to the occipital lobe
▪Synapse with cortical cells, and vision interpretation
(seeing) occurs
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 45
Physiology of Vision
▪Summary of the pathway of impulses from the
retina to the point of visual interpretation
1.Optic nerve
2.Optic chiasma
3.Optic tract
4.Thalamus
5.Optic radiation
6.Optic cortex in occipital lobe of brain
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 46
Figure 8.10 Visual fields of the eyes and visual pathway to the brain (inferior view).
Fixation point
Right eye Left eye
Optic
chiasma
Optic
nerve
Optic
tract
Optic
radiation
Thalamus Occipital lobe
(visual cortex)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 47
Physiology of Vision
▪Visual fields
▪Each eye “sees” a slightly different view
▪Field of view overlaps for each eye
▪Binocular vision results and provides:
▪Depth perception (three-dimensional vision)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 48
A Closer Look
▪Emmetropia—eye focuses images correctly on
the retina
▪Myopia (nearsightedness)
▪Distant objects appear blurry
▪Light from those objects fails to reach the retina and
are focused in front of it
▪Results from an eyeball that is too long
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 49
A Closer Look
▪Hyperopia (farsightedness)
▪Near objects are blurry, whereas distant objects are
clear
▪Distant objects are focused behind the retina
▪Results from an eyeball that is too short or from a “lazy
lens”
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 50
A Closer Look
▪Astigmatism
▪Images are blurry
▪Results from light focusing as lines, not points, on the
retina because of unequal curvatures of the cornea or
lens
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 51
A Closer Look 8.2 Bringing Things into Focus.
Focal
plane
Correction
None required
Concave lens
(a) Emmetropic eye
(b) Myopic eye
(nearsighted) Convex lens
(c) Hyperopic eye
(farsighted)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 52
Physiology of Vision
▪Eye reflexes
▪Convergence: reflexive movement of the eyes medially
when we focus on a close object
▪Photopupillary reflex: bright light causes pupils to
constrict
▪Accommodation pupillary reflex: viewing close objects
causes pupils to constrict
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 53
Part II: The Ear: Hearing and Balance
▪Ear houses two senses
1.Hearing
2.Equilibrium (balance)
▪Receptors are mechanoreceptors
▪Different organs house receptors for each sense
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 54
Anatomy of the Ear
▪The ear is divided into three areas
1.External (outer) ear
2.Middle ear
3.Internal (inner) ear
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 55
Figure 8.11 Anatomy of the ear.
External (outer) ear Middle ear
Internal (inner) ear
Vestibulocochlear
nerve
Auricle
(pinna) Semicircular
canals
Cochlea
Vestibule
Round window
Pharyngotympanic
(auditory) tube
Tympanic
membrane
(eardrum)
External acoustic
meatus
(auditory canal)
Anvil
(incus)
Auditory ossicles
Hammer
(malleus)
Stirrup
(stapes)
Oval window
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 56
Anatomy of the Ear
▪External (outer) ear
▪Auricle (pinna)
▪External acoustic meatus (auditory canal)
▪Narrow chamber in the temporal bone
▪Lined with skin and ceruminous (earwax) glands
▪Ends at the tympanic membrane (eardrum)
▪External ear is involved only in collecting sound waves
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 57
Anatomy of the Ear
▪Middle ear cavity (tympanic cavity)
▪Air-filled, mucosa-lined cavity within the temporal bone
▪Involved only in the sense of hearing
▪Located between tympanic membrane and oval
window and round window
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 58
Anatomy of the Ear
▪Middle ear cavity (tympanic cavity) (continued)
▪Pharyngotympanic tube (auditory tube)
▪Links middle ear cavity with the throat
▪Equalizes pressure in the middle ear cavity so the
eardrum can vibrate
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 59
Anatomy of the Ear
▪Middle ear cavity (tympanic cavity) (continued)
▪Three bones (ossicles) span the cavity
1.Malleus (hammer)
2.Incus (anvil)
3.Stapes (stirrup)
▪Function
▪Transmit vibrations from tympanic membrane to the
fluids of the inner ear
▪Vibrations travel from the hammer →anvil →stirrup →
oval window of inner ear
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 60
Figure 8.11 Anatomy of the ear.
External (outer) ear Middle ear
Internal (inner) ear
Vestibulocochlear
nerve
Auricle
(pinna) Semicircular
canals
Cochlea
Vestibule
Round window
Pharyngotympanic
(auditory) tube
Tympanic
membrane
(eardrum)
External acoustic
meatus
(auditory canal)
Anvil
(incus)
Auditory ossicles
Hammer
(malleus)
Stirrup
(stapes)
Oval window
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 61
Anatomy of the Ear
▪Internal (inner) ear
▪Includes sense organs for hearing and balance
▪Bony labyrinth (osseous labyrinth) consists of:
▪Cochlea
▪Vestibule
▪Semicircular canals
▪Bony labyrinth is filled with perilymph
▪Membranous labyrinth is suspended in perilymph and
contains endolymph
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 62
Figure 8.11 Anatomy of the ear.
External (outer) ear Middle ear
Internal (inner) ear
Vestibulocochlear
nerve
Auricle
(pinna) Semicircular
canals
Cochlea
Vestibule
Round window
Pharyngotympanic
(auditory) tube
Tympanic
membrane
(eardrum)
External acoustic
meatus
(auditory canal)
Anvil
(incus)
Auditory ossicles
Hammer
(malleus)
Stirrup
(stapes)
Oval window
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 63
Equilibrium
▪Equilibrium receptors of the inner ear are called
the vestibular apparatus
▪Vestibular apparatus has two functional parts
1.Static equilibrium
2.Dynamic equilibrium
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 64
Figure 8.13a Structure and function of the crista ampullaris (dynamic equilibrium receptor region).
Semicircular
canals
Ampulla
Vestibular
nerve
Vestibule
(a)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 65
Static Equilibrium
▪Maculae—receptors in the vestibule
▪Report on the position of the head
▪Help us keep our head erect
▪Send information via the vestibular nerve (division of
cranial nerve VIII) to the cerebellum of the brain
▪Anatomy of the maculae
▪Hair cells are embedded in the otolithic membrane
▪Otoliths (tiny stones) float in a gel around hair cells
▪Movements cause otoliths to roll and bend hair cells
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 66
Figure 8.12a Structure and function of maculae (static equilibrium receptors).
Membranes in vestibule
Otoliths
Otolithic
membrane
Hair tuft
Hair cell
Nerve fibers of
vestibular division
of cranial nerve VIII(a)
Supporting cell
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 67
Figure 8.12b Structure and function of maculae (static equilibrium receptors).
Otolithic
membrane
Otoliths
Hair cell
Force of
gravity
Head upright
(b)
Head tilted
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 68
Dynamic Equilibrium
▪Crista ampullaris
▪Responds to angular or rotational movements of the
head
▪Located in the ampulla of each semicircular canal
▪Tuft of hair cells covered with cupula (gelatinous cap)
▪If the head moves, the cupula drags against the
endolymph
▪Hair cells are stimulated, and the impulse travels the
vestibular nerve to the cerebellum
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 69
Figure 8.13a Structure and function of the crista ampullaris (dynamic equilibrium receptor region).
Semicircular
canals
Ampulla
Vestibular
nerve
Vestibule
(a)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 70
Figure 8.13b Structure and function of the crista ampullaris (dynamic equilibrium receptor region).
Endolymph
Ampulla
(b)
Cupula of crista
ampullaris
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 71
Figure 8.13c Structure and function of the crista ampullaris (dynamic equilibrium receptor region).
Flow of
endolymph
Cupula
Direction of body
movement
(c)
Nerve
fibers
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 72
Hearing
▪Spiral organ of Corti
▪Located within the cochlear duct
▪Receptors = hair cells on the basilar membrane
▪Gel-like tectorial membrane is capable of bending hair
cells
▪Cochlear nerve attached to hair cells transmits nerve
impulses to auditory cortex on temporal lobe
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 73
Figure 8.14a Anatomy of the cochlea.
Spiral
organ of
Corti
Temporal
bone
Perilymph in scala vestibuli
Vestibular
membrane
Afferent fibers
of the cochlear
nerve
Temporal
bone
Cochlear
duct (contains
endolymph)
(a)
Perilymph in
scala tympani
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 74
Figure 8.14b Anatomy of the cochlea.
Hair (receptor)
cells of spiral
organ of Corti
Tectorial
membrane
Vestibular
membrane
(b)
Basilar
membrane
Supporting
cells
Fibers of
the cochlear
nerve
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 75
Hearing
▪Pathway of vibrations from sound waves
▪Move by the ossicles from the eardrum to the oval
window
▪Sound is amplified by the ossicles
▪Pressure waves cause vibrations in the basilar
membrane in the spiral organ of Corti
▪Hair cells of the tectorial membrane are bent when the
basilar membrane vibrates against it
▪An action potential starts in the cochlear nerve (cranial
nerve VIII), and the impulse travels to the temporal
lobe
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 76
Hearing
▪High-pitched sounds disturb the short, stiff fibers
of the basilar membrane
▪Receptor cells close to the oval window are stimulated
▪Low-pitched sounds disturb the long, floppy fibers
of the basilar membrane
▪Specific hair cells further along the cochlea are
affected
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 77
Figure 8.15 Route of sound waves through the ear.
EXTERNAL EAR
Pinna
Auditory
canal
Ear-
drum
MIDDLE EAR
Hammer,
anvil, stirrup
Oval
window
INTERNAL EAR
Fluids in cochlear canals
Upper and middle lower
Pressure
One
vibration
Amplitude Amplification
in middle ear
Spiral organ
of Corti
stimulated
Time
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 78
Figure 8.16 Activation of the cochlear hair cells.
Stapes Fibers of
sensory
neurons
Scala
vestibuli
Oval
window
Perilymph
Round
window
(a)
Scala
tympani
Basilar
membrane
Cochlear
duct
Fibers of basilar membrane
Apex
(long,
floppy
fibers)
2,000 200 20
(Low notes)
Base (short,
stiff fibers)
20,000
(High notes)
(b) Frequency (Hz)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 79
Hearing and Equilibrium Deficits
▪Deafness is any degree of hearing loss
▪Conduction deafness results when the transmission of
sound vibrations through the external and middle ears
is hindered
▪Sensorineural deafness results from damage to the
nervous system structures involved in hearing
▪Ménière’s syndrome affects the inner ear and causes
progressive deafness and perhaps vertigo (sensation
of spinning)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 80
Part III: Chemical Senses: Smell and Taste
▪Chemoreceptors
▪Stimulated by chemicals in solution
▪Taste has five types of receptors
▪Smell can differentiate a wider range of chemicals
▪Both senses complement each other and respond
to many of the same stimuli
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 81
Olfactory Receptors and the Sense of Smell
▪Olfactory receptors are in roof of nasal cavity
▪Olfactory receptor cells (neurons) with long cilia known
as olfactory hairsdetect chemicals
▪Chemicals must be dissolved in mucus for detection
by chemoreceptors called olfactory receptors
▪Impulses are transmitted via the olfactory
filaments to the olfactory nerve (cranial nerve I)
▪Smells are interpreted in the olfactory cortex
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 82
Figure 8.17 Location and cellular makeup of the olfactory epithelium.
Olfactory bulb
Cribriform plate
of ethmoid bone
Olfactory tract
Olfactory filaments of
the olfactory nerve
Supporting cell
Olfactory
mucosa
Mucus layer
Route of inhaled air
containing odor molecules
(b)
Olfactory receptor
cell
Olfactory hairs
(cilia)
(a)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 83
Taste Buds and the Sense of Taste
▪Taste buds house the receptor organs
▪Locations of taste buds
▪Most are on the tongue
▪Soft palate
▪Superior part of the pharynx
▪Cheeks
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 84
Taste Buds and the Sense of Taste
▪The tongue is covered with projections called
papillae that contain taste buds
▪Vallate (circumvallate) papillae
▪Fungiform papillae
▪Filiform papillae
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 85
Figure 8.18a Location and structure of taste buds.
Epiglottis
Palatine tonsil
Lingual tonsil
Foliate
papillae
Fungiform
papillae
(a)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 86
Figure 8.18b Location and structure of taste buds.
Vallate papilla
Taste buds
(b)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 87
Taste Buds and the Sense of Taste
▪Gustatory cells are the taste receptors
▪Possess gustatory hairs (long microvilli)
▪Gustatory hairs protrude through a taste pore
▪Hairs are stimulated by chemicals dissolved in saliva
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 88
Figure 8.18c Location and structure of taste buds.
Epithelium of tongue
Taste bud
Connective
tissue
Surface of
the tongue
Gustatory
(taste) cell
Basal
cell
Sensory
nerve
fiber
Gustatory hairs
(microvilli) emerging
from a taste pore
(c)
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 89
Taste Buds and the Sense of Taste
▪Impulses are carried to the gustatory complex by
several cranial nerves because taste buds are
found in different areas
▪Facial nerve (cranial nerve VII)
▪Glossopharyngeal nerve (cranial nerve IX)
▪Vagus nerve (cranial nerve X)
▪Taste buds are replaced frequently by basal cells
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 90
Taste Buds and the Sense of Taste
▪Five basic taste sensations
▪Sweet receptors respond to sugars, saccharine, some
amino acids
▪Sour receptors respond to H
+
ions or acids
▪Bitter receptors respond to alkaloids
▪Salty receptors respond to metal ions
▪Umami receptors respond to the amino acid glutamate
or the beefy taste of meat
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 91
Part IV: Developmental Aspects of the
Special Senses
▪Special sense organs are formed early in
embryonic development
▪Maternal infections during the first 5 or 6 weeks of
pregnancy may cause visual abnormalities as
well as sensorineural deafness in the developing
child
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 92
Part IV: Developmental Aspects of the
Special Senses
▪Vision requires the most learning
▪The infant has poor visual acuity (is farsighted)
and lacks color vision and depth perception at
birth
▪The eye continues to grow and mature until age
8 or 9
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 93
Part IV: Developmental Aspects of the
Special Senses
▪Age-related eye issues
▪Presbyopia—“old vision” results from decreasing lens
elasticity that accompanies aging
▪Causes difficulty to focus for close vision
▪Lacrimal glands become less active
▪Lens becomes discolored
▪Dilator muscles of iris become less efficient, causing
pupils to remain constricted
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 94
Part IV: Developmental Aspects of the
Special Senses
▪The newborn infant can hear sounds, but initial
responses are reflexive
▪By the toddler stage, the child is listening critically
and beginning to imitate sounds as language
development begins
▪Age-related ear problems
▪Presbycusis—type of sensorineural deafness that may
result from otosclerosis
▪Otosclerosis—ear ossiclesfuse
▪Congenital ear problems usually result from missing
pinnasand closed or missing external acoustic meatuses
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Slide 95
Part IV: Developmental Aspects of the
Special Senses
▪Taste and smell are most acute at birth and
decrease in sensitivity after age 40 as the number
of olfactory and gustatory receptors decreases
© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
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