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Chapter 50 Sensory and Motor Mechanisms

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Page 1: Chapter 50 Class Presentation

Chapter 50Sensory and Motor Mechanisms

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Complex sensory systems that facilitate survival.

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Bats use sonar to detect prey.

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Moths can detect the bat’s sonar.

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Include diverse mechanisms that sense stimuli and generate appropriate movement.

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2. Describe the four general functions of receptor cells…

Introduction of Sensory Reception

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All stimuli represent forms of energy.

Sensation involves converting energy into a change in the membrane potential of sensory receptors.

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All stimuli represent forms of energy.

Function of sensory pathways: sensory reception, transduction, transmission, an integration.

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Sensation and perceptions begin with sensory reception.

Detection of stimuli by receptors – both inside and outside of the body.

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3. Distinguish between sensory transduction and…

Introduction of Sensory Reception

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Sensory transduction: conversion of stimulus energy into change of membrane potential.

Change is called receptor potential – many are very sensitive.

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Transmission: sensory cell facilitate the movement of action potentials.

Larger receptor potential = more rapid action potentials.

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Integration: receptor potentials integrated through summation.

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4. Since all action potentials are the same, explain how the brain distinguishes…

Introduction of Sensory Reception

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Perception: the brain’s construction of stimuli

Brain distinguishes stimuli from different receptors by the area where the action potentials arrive.

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6. Explain the importance of sensory adaptation.

Introduction of Sensory Reception

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Type of Sensory Receptors

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7. List the five categories of sensory receptors…

Introduction of Sensory Reception

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Mechanoreceptors: sense physical deformation.

TOUCH!

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Chemoreceptors: information about the total solute concentration of a solution.

Respond to individual kinds of molecules.

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Electromagnetic receptors: detect electromagnetic energy such as light, electricity and magnetism.

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Thermoreceptors: respond to heat or cold.

Regulate body temp. by signaling both surface and core temp.

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Nociceptors: naked dendrites in the epidermis.

Pain receptors.

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8. Explain the role of mechanoreceptors in hearing and balance.

Hearing and Equilibrium

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Hearing and perception of body equilibrium are related in most animals.

Mechanoreceptors

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9. Describe the structure and function of invertebrate statocysts..

Hearing and Equilibrium

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Most invertebrates maintain equilibrium using statocysts.

Detect movement of granules called statoliths.

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10. Explain how insects may detect sound.

Hearing and Equilibrium

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Many arthropods sense sounds with body hairs that vibrate.

“Ears” consisting of tympanic membrane and receptor cells.

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11. Refer to a diagram of the human ear and give the function of each structure.

Hearing and Equilibrium

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Vibrations create percussion waves that vibrate tympanic membrane.

Bones of the middle ear transmit the vibrations.

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Vibrations create waves of fluid that move through vestibular canal.

Waves cause the basilar membrane to vibrate, bending hair cells.

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12. Explain how the mammalian ear functions as a hearing organ.

Hearing and Equilibrium

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Bending of hair cells depolarizes the membranes.

Sends action potential to the brain via the auditory nerve.

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13. Describe how the ear conveys information about volume and pitch of sound to the brain.

Hearing and Equilibrium

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Ear conveys information about volume and pitch.

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15. Describe the hearing and equilibrium system of nonmammalian vertebrates.

Hearing and Equilibrium

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Fishes have only a pair of inner ears near the brain.

Also have lateral line system that detect and respond to water movement.

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16. Distinguish between tastants and odorants.

Chemoreception: Taste and Smell

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Taste and smell rely on similar set of sensory receptors.

Terrestrial animals:Gustation: Taste, detection of chemicals called tastants.Olfaction: Smell, detection of odorant molecules.

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Taste and smell rely on similar set of sensory receptors.

Taste buds detect five taste perceptions: sweet, sour, salty, butter, and umami – different regions of the tongue.

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19. Describe what happens after an odorant binds to an ordorant receptor…

Chemoreception: Taste and Smell

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Olfactory receptors are neurons that line the upper portion of the nasal cavity.

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Photoreception and Vision

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22. Refer to a diagram of the vertebrate eye…

Photoreception and Vision

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The basic structure of the vertebrate eye.

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Muscle Function

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Muscle activity is a response to input from the nervous system.

The action of a muscle is always to contract.

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• Skeletal muscle characterized by a hierarchy of smaller and smaller units.

• Consists of a bundle of long fibers – each a single cell – running the length of the muscle.

• Each muscle fiber is a bundle of smaller myofibrils.

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Two kinds of myofilaments.

Thin: two strands of actin, one strand of regulatory protein.

Thick: staggered arrays of myosin molecules.

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Skeletal muscle also called striated muscle – arrangement of myofilaments create light and dark bands.

Functional unit of a muscle is called a sarcomere – bordered by Z lines.

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Sliding-filament model: filaments slide past each other, producing overlap.

Based on interaction between actin of thin filaments and myosin of the thick filaments.

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Fig. 50-27-1

Thinfilaments

ATP Myosin head (low-energy configuration

Thick filament

Thin filament

Thickfilament

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Fig. 50-27-2

Thinfilaments

ATP Myosin head (low-energy configuration

Thick filament

Thin filament

Thickfilament

Actin

Myosin head (high-energy configuration

Myosin binding sites

ADP

P i

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Fig. 50-27-3

Thinfilaments

ATP Myosin head (low-energy configuration

Thick filament

Thin filament

Thickfilament

Actin

Myosin head (high-energy configuration

Myosin binding sites

ADP

P i

Cross-bridgeADP

P i

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Fig. 50-27-4

Thinfilaments

ATP Myosin head (low-energy configuration

Thick filament

Thin filament

Thickfilament

Actin

Myosin head (high-energy configuration

Myosin binding sites

ADP

P i

Cross-bridgeADP

P i

Myosin head (low-energy configuration

Thin filament movestoward center of sarcomere.

ATP

ADP P i+

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Skeletal muscle fiber contract only when stimulated by a motor neuron.

Muscle at rest, myosin-binding sites on thin filament blocked by protein tropomyosin.

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• For a muscle fiber to contract, myosin-binding sites must be uncovered

• This occurs when calcium ions (Ca2+) bind to a set of regulatory proteins, the troponin complex

• Muscle fiber contracts when the concentration of Ca2+ is high; muscle fiber contraction stops when the concentration of Ca2+ is low

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• The synaptic terminal of the motor neuron releases the neurotransmitter acetylcholine

• Acetylcholine depolarizes the muscle, causing it to produce an action potential

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Action potentials travel to the interior of the muscle fiber along transverse (T) tubules

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The action potential along T tubules causes the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) to release Ca2+

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The Ca2+ binds to the troponin complex on the thin filaments

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This binding exposes myosin-binding sites and allows the cross-bridge cycle to proceed

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Types of Skeletal Muscle Fibers• Skeletal muscle fibers can be classified

– As oxidative or glycolytic fibers, by the source of ATP

– As fast-twitch or slow-twitch fibers, by the speed of muscle contraction

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Oxidative and Glycolytic Fibers• Oxidative fibers rely on aerobic respiration to

generate ATP• These fibers have many mitochondria, a rich

blood supply, and much myoglobin• Myoglobin is a protein that binds oxygen more

tightly than hemoglobin does

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• Glycolytic fibers use glycolysis as their primary source of ATP

• Glycolytic fibers have less myoglobin than oxidative fibers, and tire more easily

• In poultry and fish, light meat is composed of glycolytic fibers, while dark meat is composed of oxidative fibers

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Fast-Twitch and Slow-Twitch Fibers• Slow-twitch fibers contract more slowly, but

sustain longer contractions• All slow twitch fibers are oxidative• Fast-twitch fibers contract more rapidly, but

sustain shorter contractions• Fast-twitch fibers can be either glycolytic or

oxidative

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• Most skeletal muscles contain both slow-twitch and fast-twitch muscles in varying ratios