- Vision
- our most dominating sense
- the height of a wave gives us it's intensity (brightness)
- the length of the wave give us it's true (color)
- the longer the wave the more red
- the shorter of the wavelength the more violet
- Transduction
- transforming signals into neural impulses.
- information goes from the sense to the thalamus, then in the various areas in the brain
- light energy to vision
- chemical energy to smell and taste
- Young-Helmholtz Trichromatic ( three colors) Theory
- types of cones
- red
- blue, green
- these types of cones can make millions of combination of colors
- Opponent-process Theory
- the sensory receptor come in pairs
- red/ Green, yellow/blue, black and white
- if one color is stimulated the other is in hibited
- Hearing
- we hear sound waves
- the height of the wave gives us the amplitude of the sound
- the frequency pf the waves give us the pitch of the sound
- the longer the wave length the low the pitch
- the shorter the wave length the higher of the pitch.
- Transduction in the ear
- sound waves hit the eardrum then anvil then hammer then stirrup then oval window
- everything just vibrating
- then the cochlea vibrates
- the cochlea is lines with mucus called basilar membrane
- In the basilar membrane there are hair cell
- when the hair cells vibrate they turn vibration into neural impulses which called organ of corti sent them to thalamus up auditory nerve.
- Pitch theory
- place: theory different hairs vibrate in the cochlea when there are different pitches.
- so some hairs vibrate when they hear high pitches and other vibrate when they hear low pitches
- Frequency Theory
- all of the hair vibrate but at different speeds.
- deafness
- conduction
- something goes wrong with the sound and the vibration on the way to the cochlea
- you can place the bones or get a hearing aid to help
- Nerve (sensorineural ) deafness the hair cells in the cochlea get damaged
- loud noises can cause this type of deafness,
- No way to replace the hairs
- cochlea implant is possible.
- Smell and Taste
- Sensory interaction the principle that one sense may influence another
- Taste
- we have bumps on our tongue called papillae
- Taste buds are located on the papillae ( they area actually all over our mouth)
- Touch
- receptors located in our skin
- Gate control Theory of pain
- cora contain a neurological gate that blocks the pain signals or allows to pass onto the brain
- Vestibular sense
- tell us where our body in oriented in space our sense of balance
- Kinesthetic
- tell us where our body part are
- receptors located in our muscle and joints
- Perception
- the process of organizing and interpreting information enabling us to recognize meaningful object or events
- Gestalt philosophy
- the whole is greater than the sum of it's parts
- Figure ground relationship
- the organization of the visual field into objects(figure)
- that stand out from their surrounding (ground)
- grouping
- the perceptual tendency to organized stimuli into groups that we understand
- proximity, similarity,
- depth perception
- the ability to see objects in three dimensions although the images that strike the reting are two dimensional allows us to judge distance
- Binocular Cues
- the closer an object comes to you the greater the disparity is between the two image
- retinal disparity an binocular cue for seeing depth
I think that it is amazing how advanced technology and the medical field is nowadays and there isn't a way to fix deafness. I know the concept is very complex but I do believe that there will be a way to fix it one day.
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