Hearing, Touch, Taste and Smell

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Hearing, Touch, Taste and Smell

description

Hearing, Touch, Taste and Smell. Hearing. Audition – the sense of hearing. Frequency of Sound Waves. frequency - the number of the waves gives us the pitch if the sound. Amplitude of Sound Waves. amplitude - the height of the wave of the sound. Absolute Threshold. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Hearing, Touch, Taste and Smell

Page 1: Hearing, Touch, Taste and Smell

Hearing, Touch, Taste and Smell

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Hearing

Audition – the sense of hearing

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Frequency of Sound Waves

• frequency - the number of the waves gives us the pitch if the sound.

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Amplitude of Sound Waves

• amplitude - the height of the wave of the sound.

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Absolute Threshold• Absolute Threshold =

zero decibels• 10 decibels = 10X

increase in sound intensity

• Example:– A 30 decibel sound is

_____ times louder than a 10 decibel sound

– A 40 decibel sound is _____ times louder than a 10 decibel sound

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Parts of the Ear

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Transduction• Overview – Eardrum, Hammer, Anvil, Stirrup, Oval Window,

Cochlea, Auditory Nerve, Temporal Lobe, Auditory Cortex

1. Outer Ear Ear Drum – tight membrane that vibrates with sound waves. Transmits sound to the bones of the middle ear.

2. Middle Ear hammer, anvil, stirrup to cochlea’s oval window

3. Inner Ear Cochlea – coiled fluid filled tube where transduction

occurs– Oval window’s vibrations cause basilar

membrane’s hair cells to turn vibrations into neural impulses

4. Auditory Nerve – send neural messages via the thalamus to the auditory cortex in the brain.

5. Thalamus to Temporal lobes Auditory cortex

It is all about the vibrations!!!

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The structure of the ear

Bones of the middle ear = the hammer, anvil, stirrup which vibrate with the eardrum.

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The structure of the ear

Mechanical vibrations triggered by sound waves are transduced into neural impulses by _____________?

_____________ do the same job for vision as __________ do for audition

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Neural impulse to the brain

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Perceiving Loudness• Damage to Basilar membrane’s hair

cells = hearing loss (lose sensation of soft sounds)– # of activated hair cells allows us to

perceive loudness– Compression – harder to hear sounds are more

amplified than loud sound

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Pitch Theories

Place Theory and Frequency Theory

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Place Theory or Herman von Helmholtz Theory

• Brain determines pitch by recognizing the place on the membrane that is generating the neural impulse

• Best explains how we sense high pitches

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Frequency Theory• Brain knows pitch by the

frequency of the neural impulse– Frequency (speed) of sound wave

matches the speed of the neural impulse.

• Theory limitations: Can’t explain high pitch sounds (neural impulses can only travel at 1000 impulses per sec.)

• Best explains how we hear low pitches

• Example:

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Volley Principle• Neural cells

alternate firing in rapid succession

• Can achieve a combined frequency of above 1000 waves/sec

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Locating Sound• Sound waves strike

one ear sooner and more intensely in the direction of the sound

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DeafnessConduction Deafness

• Damage to the mechanical system that conducts vibrations in the middle ear (hammer, anvil, stirrup).

• You can replace the bones or get a hearing aid to help.

• Example:

Nerve (sensorineural) Deafness

• The hair cells on the basilar membrain in the cochlea get damaged.

• Loud noises can cause this type of deafness.

• NO WAY to replace the hairs.

• Cochlea implant - converts sound waves to into electrical signals.

• Example:

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Touch

• Receptors located in our skin.• Types of touch

–Pressure*–Warmth–Cold–Pain

• Sensation of hot

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Kinesthetic Sense• Tells us where our

individual body parts are.

• Receptors located in our joints, tendons, bones and ears

• Example: Without the kinesthetic sense

you could not touch the button to make copies of your buttocks.

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Vestibular Sense• Enables you to

sense your body position and balance

• Located in our semicircular canals in our ears.

• Example:

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Pain• Biological Influences

– Noiceptors – sensory receptors that detect hurtful temperatures, pressure or chemicals

– Gate-control theory* – Endorphins– Phantom limb sensations– Tinnitus

• Psychological influences– Distraction– Memory of Pain – peak pain, end pain

• Socio Cultural Influences– More pain when others experience pain– Mirror neurons that empathize with others pain

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Gate Control Theory• Gate Control Theory – spinal cord

contains a “gate” that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass through to the brain

• Example:

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Taste

• Sweet, sour, salty and bitter–Umami

• Taste buds–Chemical sense

• Age and taste

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Taste• Bumps on our tongue

are called papillae.• Taste buds are

located on the papillae 200+ each containing a pore.

• Pore – 50-100 taste receptor cells that sense food molecules

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Sensory Interaction• Sensory interaction –

some senses influence others

• Examples:Jello in the shape of a brain looks so

unappetizing, it tastes terrible tooMcGurk Effect – seeing mouth

movements for ga, but hearing ha, we may perceive da

(saying one syllable, while hearing another, you perceive a third)

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Smell• Olfaction

– Chemical sense– Olfactory receptors - odor molecules

fit into receptors like a lock and key located in the olfactory bulb

– Olfactory bulb – transmits smell from the nose to the brain

– Olfactory nerve – sends neural messages to from the olfactory bulb directly to the olfactory cortex in the brain bypassing the thalamus

– Olfactory cortex – receives information from the olfactory bulb

• Conscious awareness of odors• Identification of odors

– Hotline between olfactory cortex and limbic system (memory and emotion)

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Smell (olfaction)

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Smell and age