This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

34
This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment

Transcript of This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Page 1: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment

Page 2: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Sensing and reacting to the environment is critical

Page 3: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Failure to properly sense and react to the environment can be fatal

Page 4: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

CB 48.3

Nerves allow us to perceive the environment while the brain integrates the incoming signals to determine an appropriate response.

Page 5: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

CB 48.4Neurons: cells specialized fortransmitting signals

Page 6: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

In the brain neurons are shorter and highly interconnected

Fig 48.5

Page 7: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Axon

Signals move through neurons in one direction

Signals

Fig 48.4

Page 8: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Axon

Signals move along a neuron via movement of ions across the membrane

Signals

Fig 48.4

Page 9: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Ion movement across the membrane causes the signal to travel from one end to the other

Fig 48.11

Page 10: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

At rest a neuron is polarized. The electrical signal is a depolarization that moves along the neuron.

Fig 48.11

Page 11: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

electrical electricalat synapse chemical

At the synapse the electrical signal is converted to a chemical signal: neurotransmitters

Page 12: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

CB 48.14

Neurons are commonly connected to many other neurons, and the effect of the different incoming signals determines what the neuron will do.

Page 13: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

electrical electricalat synapse chemical

http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/matthews/actionp.html

Page 14: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

CB 48.3

Nerves allow us to perceive the environment while the brain integrates the incoming signals to determine an appropriate response.

Page 15: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

The brain and the central nervous system integrate the various incoming signals

CB 49.4

Page 16: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Different regions of the cerebral cortex integrate different inputs/outputs

CB 49.15

Page 17: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

CB 49.17

Visualizing the specialization of brain regions

Page 18: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Some body parts have more sensory input/motor control

CB 49.16

Page 19: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

CB 48.3

Some responses are to subtle stimuli

Page 20: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Circadian Rhythms: daily patterns set by light(northern flying squirrel)

Page 21: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

CB 48.3

We are not conscious of much of what happens in the brain

Page 22: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Today’s video about different human reactions to cool:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHmM7gJhscU

Page 23: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Nervous System Signaling

Stimulus

Transduction Transmission

Response

Integration

Page 24: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Smells are detected by receptor neurons in our nose. Each receptor is sensitive to a different chemical

Fig 50.15

Page 25: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Activating more neurons leads to stronger perception

Fig 50.15

Page 26: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Fig 50.2

This stretch sensitive neuron transduces different signals depending on the amplitude of the stimulus

Page 27: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Fig 50.18

Light is detected in the eye by receptors on the retina

Page 28: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Fig 50.19

Some vision problems arise from misshapen eyeballs too long

too short

Page 29: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

AAL 42.10

Page 30: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Light receptor neurons of the eye:Rods detect black and whiteCones detect colors…one type of cone for each color - red, blue, and green

Page 31: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Fig 50.22

Inhibitoryneuro-transmitter

No light

Membrane depolarized

No Signal

Page 32: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Fig 50.22Polar Membrane

light

Noinhibitoryneuro-transmitter

Signal sent

Page 33: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Fig 50.23

Vertebrate retina structure

Page 34: This week: Sensing and Responding to the Environment.

Fig 46.1

Nerves allow us to perceive the environment while the brain integrates the incoming signals to determine an appropriate response.

Response

Responses can be release of hormones, change in cell activity, or muscle contraction