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42 notecards = 11 pages (4 cards per page)

Viewing:

Sensory, Motor, & Integrative Systems

front 1

How is sensation different from perception ?

back 1

Sensation: detection of a stimulus (a change) in the environment. This may or many not include conscious awareness of the stimulus. Perception: Being conscious of a stimulus, able to interpret the sensation.

front 2

What is a sensory modality?

back 2

Sensory modality is a specific type of sensation (touch, smell, etc)

front 3

How are generator potentials and receptor potentials similar?How are they different?

back 3

Generator potential is a graded potential, which, if strong enough, will trigger a nerve impulse in a first order sensory neuron. Receptor potential also leads to nerve impulse. This is a graded potential as well, which causes a neurotransmitter release, leading to an EPSP or IPSP in a first order sensory neuron.

front 4

What is the difference between rapidly adapting and slowly adapting receptors?

back 4

Rapidly adapting signals a change in a stimulus, slowly adapting triggers and remains for as long as the stimulus persists.

front 5

Which somatic sensory receptors are encapsulated?

back 5

Touch, pressure, vibration

front 6

Why do some receptors adapt slowly and others adapt rapidly?

back 6

Fast adapting alerts you if there is a change in the stimulus, like the onset of touch. They are more sensitive to small changes because they fire rapidly. Slow adapting fire slower, and are usually involved in static perception (e.g. holding an object).

front 7

Which somatic sensory receptors mediate touch sensations?

back 7

Meissner's corpuscles, hair root plexus, Merkel disc, Ruffini corpuscles.

front 8

Stimulation of receptors in skeletal muscles, joints, tendons, and fascia causes;

back 8

Deep Somatic Pain

front 9

Pain that arises from stimulation of receptors in the skin is called;

back 9

Superficial Somatic Pain

front 10

Nociceptors are found in every tissue of the body except:

back 10

the brain

front 11

What are Muscle spindles?

back 11

Proprioceptors in skeletal

front 12

What is the awareness of body position?

back 12

Proprioception

front 13

What is referred pain ?

back 13

Visceral pain that is felt at a site remote from its origin, such as in an area of skin that is far away from the affected visceral organ.

front 14

How does fast pain differ from slow pain?

back 14

Fast pain is perceived 0.1 seconds after the stimulus, it is sharp, acute pain. Slow pain is perceived 1 second or more after the stimulus and tends to be chronic, throbbing pain.

front 15

What type of stimuli activates nociceptors?

back 15

Intense thermal, mechanical,or chemical stimuli

front 16

What aspects of the muscle function are monitoring by muscle spindles and tendon organs ?

back 16

Stretch and tension in the muscle.

front 17

How is a muscle spindle activated?

back 17

When the central area of the intrafusal fibers is stretched.

front 18

When a muscle contracts it exerts a force that pulls the points of attachment of the muscle at either end toward each other. What is this force called?

back 18

Muscle Tension

front 19

What is ischemia?

back 19

inadequate blood flow to an organ

front 20

What type of pain is acute, sharp, or prickling ? And is not felt in deeper tissues of the body ?

back 20

Fast pain

front 21

The Anterolateral Pathway is also know as:

back 21

The Spinolateral Tract

front 22

Each muscle spindle consists of several slowly adapting sensory nerve endings that wrap around 3 to 10 specialized muscle fibers. A connective tissue capsule encloses the sensory nerve endings and anchors the spindle to________ & _____________.

back 22

The endomysium and perimysium

front 23

Which pathway conveys nerve impulses for pain, warmth, itch, tickle, and posterior head to the cerebral cortex?

back 23

The Anterolateral Pathway

front 24

What are the two major tracts that form the posterior columns ?

back 24

Gracile faciculus and cuneate fasciculus

front 25

Where do first neurons conduct impulses ?

back 25

from the somatic receptors into the brain stem or spinal cord.

front 26

What pathway relays information from the somatic sensory receptor to the primary somatosensory area in the cerebral cortex and to the cerebellum?

back 26

Somatic sensory pathway

front 27

Which cranial nerve conveys impulses for most somatic sensations from the left side of the face into the pons ?

back 27

The left trigeminal nerve V conveys nerve impulses from the left side of the face to into the pons.

front 28

What are the functional differences between the posterior column - medial lemniscus pathway, the anterolateral pathway, and the trigeminothalamic pathway ?

back 28

Medial lemniscus pathway: touch, pressure, vibration, conscious proprioception in body, neck and back of head. Anterolateral pathway: pain, cold, heat, itch, tickle, throughout body. Trigeminothalamic pathway: tactile, thermal, pain, proprioception in face/head.

front 29

What type of sensory information is carried in the spinocerebellar tracts, and what is its function?

back 29

proprioception. Helps to maintain balance, motor coordination, balance.

front 30

Which body parts have the largest representation in the primary somatosensory area ?

back 30

Face, tongue, lips, fingertips/hands.

front 31

How do the functions of upper motor neurons from the cerebral cortex and from the brain stem differ?

back 31

Cerebral cortex Upper motor neurons are essential for the execution of voluntatry movements of the body. Brain stem UMN regulate muscle tone, comtrol posture

front 32

Name the pathway ; touch,pressure, vibration, and conscious

proprioception from limbs, trunk, neck, and posterior head to

the cerebral cortex.

back 32

Posterior column-medial lemniscus pathway

front 33

What are the two major tracts that are located in the spinal cord that carries proprioceptive impulses to the cerebellum.

back 33

Anterior and Posterior Spinocerebellar Tracts

front 34

Name the pathway; pain, cold,

warmth, itch, and tickle from limbs, trunk, neck, and

posterior head to the cerebral cortex.

back 34

Anterolateral (spinothalamic) pathway

front 35

Name the pathway; touch, temperature, pain,

and proprioception from face, nasal cavity, oral cavity, and teeth to cerebral cortex.

teeth to cerebral cortex.

back 35

Trigeminothalamic pathway =

front 36

What are the three pathways that are somatic sensory pathways?

back 36

Anterolateral, Trigeminothalamic, Posterior- medial lemniscus Pathways.

front 37

Neurons from __________ and cerebellum help regulate the activity of upper motor neurons.

back 37

the basal nuclei

front 38

Because only the lower motor neurons transmit output from the CNS to skeletal muscles, they are referred to as

back 38

The final common pathway

front 39

________ motor neurons have their cell bodies in the brain stem and spinal cord and their axons are in the cranial and spinal nerves.

back 39

Lower Motor Neurons

front 40

________ motor neurons in the cerebral cortex or brain stem connect directly or, more often, indirectly (via interneurons called local circuit neurons) with lower motor neurons that innervate skeletal muscles.

back 40

Upper Motor Neurons

front 41

The direct (voluntary) motor pathways that control muscles of the limbs and trunk:

back 41

The lateral and anterior corticospinal, cortico-bulbar pathways

front 42

The pathway controls the distal muscles responsible for precise, skilled movements. Axons decussate in the medulla (pyramidal decussation).

back 42

Lateral pathway