1 / 43

Sensory Physiology equilibrium & vision

Sensory Physiology equilibrium & vision. Equilibrium: Mechanoreceptor. Body balance Body position Body movement Propioceptors Vision Vestibular apparatus. Organs of Equilibrium. Receptor cells are in two structures Vestibule Semicircular canals. Figure 8.16a, b. Organs of Equilibrium.

larryjones
Download Presentation

Sensory Physiology equilibrium & vision

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sensory Physiology equilibrium & vision

  2. Equilibrium: Mechanoreceptor • Body balance • Body position • Body movement • Propioceptors • Vision • Vestibular apparatus

  3. Organs of Equilibrium • Receptor cells are in two structures • Vestibule • Semicircular canals Figure 8.16a, b

  4. Organs of Equilibrium • Equilibrium has two functional parts • Static equilibrium – sense of gravity at rest • Dynamic equilibrium – angular and rotary head movements Figure 8.16a, b

  5. Static Equilibrium - Rest • Maculae – receptors in the vestibule • Report on the position of the head • Send information via the vestibular nerve • Anatomy of the maculae • Hair cells are embedded in the otolithic membrane • Otoliths (tiny stones) float in a gel around the hair cells • Movements cause otoliths to bend the hair cells

  6. Function of Maculae Figure 8.15

  7. Dynamic Equilibrium - Movement • receptors in the semicircular canals • Tuft of hair cells • Cupula (gelatinous cap) covers the hair cells Figure 8.16c

  8. Dynamic Equilibrium • Action of angular head movements • The cupula stimulates the hair cells • An impulse is sent via the vestibular nerve to the cerebellum Figure 8.16c

  9. Equilibrium: Mechanoreceptor • Integration • Medulla • Cerebellum • Thalamus • Cortex Figure 10-26: Central nervous system pathways for equilibrium

  10. Equilibrium: Vestibular Apparatus • Otolith organs • Gravity • Calcite crystals • Hair cells • Semicircular canals • Fluid moves • Cristae • Cupula • Hair cells

  11. Equilibrium: Vestibular Apparatus Figure 10-23a, b: ANATOMY SUMMARY: Vestibular Apparatus

  12. Equilibrium: Vestibular Apparatus Figure 10-23c, d: ANATOMY SUMMARY: Vestibular Apparatus

  13. The Eye and Vision • 70 percent of all sensory receptors are in the eyes, only see 1/6th of eye • Each eye has over a million nerve fibers • Protection for the eye • Most of the eye is enclosed in a bony orbit • A cushion of fat surrounds most of the eye

  14. Accessory Structures of the Eye • Eyelids • Eyelashes Figure 8.1b

  15. Accessory Structures of the Eye • Eyelashes =have modified sebacious glands produce an oily secretion to lubricate the eye Figure 8.1b

  16. Accessory Structures of the Eye • Conjunctiva • Membrane that lines the eyelids • Connects to the surface of the eye • Secretes mucus to lubricate the eye

  17. Accessory Structures of the Eye • Lacrimal gland • Tears: antibodies, lysozymes, stress? Figure 8.1a

  18. Extrinsic Eye Muscles • Muscles attach to the outer surface of the eye • Produce eye movements Figure 8.2

  19. Structure of the Eye • The wall is composed of three layers • Sclera&Cornea fibrous outside layer • Choroid – middle layer • Sensory (retina) inside layer Figure 8.3a

  20. The Fibrous layer • 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

  21. Choroid Layer • Blood-rich nutritive layer • Pigment prevents light from scattering • Modified interiorly into two structures • Cilliary body – smooth muscle • Iris • Pigmented layer that gives eye color • Pupil – rounded opening in the iris

  22. Sensory layer (Retina) • Contains receptor cells (photoreceptors) • Rods • Cones • Signals pass from photoreceptors and leave the retina toward the brain through the optic nerve

  23. Neurons of the Retina Slide 8.11

  24. Neurons of the Retina and Vision • Rods • Most are found towards the edges of the retina • Allow dim light vision and peripheral vision • Perception is all in gray tones

  25. Neurons of the Retina and Vision • Cones – 3 types detect different colors • Most dense at the center of the retina • Fovea centralis – area of the retina with only cones • Lack of one type = color blindness • No photoreceptor cells are at the optic disk, or blind spot

  26. Lens • Biconvex crystal-like structure • Held in place by a suspensory ligament attached to the ciliary body Figure 8.3a

  27. Internal Eye Chamber Fluids • Aqueous humor in Anterior Segment • Watery fluid found in chamber between the lens and cornea • Similar to blood plasma • Helps maintain intraocular pressure • Provides nutrients for the lens and cornea • Reabsorbed into venous blood • Blocked drainage = glaucoma

  28. Internal Eye Chamber Fluids • Vitreous humor in Posterior Segment • Gel-like substance behind the lens • Keeps the eye from collapsing • Lasts a lifetime and is not replaced

  29. Lens Accommodation • Light must be focused to a point on the retina for optimal vision • The eye is set for distance vision (over 20 ft away) • The lens must change shape to focus for closer objects Figure 8.9

  30. Correcting the Eye • Nearsightedness = myopia • Focus of light in front of retina • Eyeball too long or lens too thick • Distant objects are blurry • Farsightedness = hyperopia • Focus of light beyond the retina • Short eyeball or lens too thin • Near objects are blurry.

  31. Correct focus

  32. Hyperopia

  33. Astigmatism • Unequal curvatures in cornea & lens

  34. Vision: Photoreceptors • Reflected light translated into mental image • Pupil limits light, lens focuses light • Retinal rods and cones are photoreceptors Figure 10-36: Photoreceptors in the fovea

  35. Photoreception and Local Integration • Rods – night vision • Cones – color & details • Bipolar & ganglion cells converge, integrate APs

  36. Photoreception and Local Integration Figure 10-35: ANATOMY SUMMARY: The Retina

  37. Retina: More Detail • Rod cells: monochromatic • Cone cells: red, green, & blue • Discs: visual pigments • Pigmented epithelium • Melanin granules • Prevents reflection

  38. Retina: More Detail Figure 10-38: Photoreceptors: rods and cones

  39. Phototransduction • Photons "bleach" opsin, retinal released, cascade, Na+ channel closes, K+ opens , hyperpolarization • Reduces NT release

  40. Phototransduction Figure 10-40: Phototransduction in rods

  41. Vision: Integration of Signals to Perception • Bipolar • Ganglion • Movement • Color • Optic nerve • Optic chiasm • Optic tract • Thalamus • Visual cortex Figure 10-29b, c: Neural pathways for vision and the papillary reflex

  42. Summary • Sensory pathway: receptor, sensory neuron(s) & CNS • Somatic senses: touch, temperature, pain & proprioception communicate body information to CNS • Special senses: taste, smell, hearing, equilibrium, & vision • Outside conditions for CNS integration into perception • Receptors transduce mechanical, chemical or photon energy into GPs then to APs

More Related