sensory processes 3270 lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously...

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Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9

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Page 1: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Sensory Processes3270

Lecture 9

Page 2: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory receptor cells), glomerulus (contact zones between receptor cells and mitral cells:plural glomeruli), convergence (1,000:1), mitral cell, olfactory tubercle of cortex (part of paleocortex), medial dorsal nucleus of thalamus , orbitofrontal cortex, olfactory neocortex

paleocortex associated with limbic system, limbic system associated with emotions (electrical stimulation causes sham rage), limbic system associated with memories (H.M. had lesions here and lost the ability to memorize things), some hot spots in olfactory tubercle and on olfactory mucosa

KEYWORDS -- SMELL I

Page 3: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

odour quality, no primaries identified in olfactory system, poor tuning of receptors (to chemicals or chemical types) (sharpened by lateral inhibition, inhibitory interneurones, granule cells), Henning smell prism, stereochemical theories based on lock and key partially successful, BUT no receptor sites identified, similar shaped molecules can be associated with different smell perceptions

cells broadly tuned (responding to many different chemicals associated with many different smells)

codingintensity= firing rate/recruitment, quality = distributed pattern code, problems in identifying many smells at once, binding problem

KEYWORDS -- SMELL II

Page 4: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

odour thresholds, olfactorium; unique technical problems!, humans very sensitive (eg. mercaton can be detected at 1 part per 50,000,000,000), affected by gender; can be affected by menstrual cycle, affected by age

adaptation, thresholds raised (by exposure), masking (by other chemicals), some cross effects: eg. adapting to orange affects smell of lemons

identification, can identify gender from shirt, prefer own odours, odour memories long lasting; associated with emotions (via limbic system) "designed not to forget”, pheromones, releasers (immediate effect), eg. bitch on heat, territorial markers, humans?, McClintock effect (synchronized menstrual cycles), primers (longer term) eg. mice need males around for proper oestrus cycles

KEYWORDS -- SMELL III

Page 5: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

PATHWAYS olfactory receptor cells to mitral cells in olfactory bulb to olfactory tubercle in paleocortex THEN

1 to medial dorsal thalamus to olfactory cortex

(ORBITOFRONTAL CORTEX) 2 to limbic system 3 brain stem pathways associated with pheromones

ALSO

inhibitory pathway (via inhibitory interneurone: granule cells) from one olfactory bulb to the other to do with detecting the DIRECTION from which a smell originates

KEYWORDS -- SMELL IV

Page 6: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Keywords on hearing (introduction)

auditory canal, ear drum, ossicles, oval window, cochlea, helicotrema, basilar membrane, tectorial membrane, hair cells, kinocilium, stereocilia,

amplification (by ossicles & area difference between ear drum and oval window), travelling wave, resonance, tonotopic coding, cochleotopic coding, transduction

auditory thresholds, effect of age, different animals, fundamental, harmonics, timbre, pitch/frequency, loudness/amplitude, pure tone, equal loudness, masking

place theory, periodicity theory, duplicity theory, missing fundamental, goldfish has no basilar membrane - can distinguish freqs, phase-locking, diplacusis,

Page 7: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Sensory Processes3270

Speech

Page 8: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory
Page 9: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

time

Formant 3

Formant 2

Formant 1

Page 10: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Formant transitions

Formants

Page 11: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Same sounds, different spectrographs...

Page 12: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Voice Onset Time (VOT)

ShortVOT

LongVOT

Page 13: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

McGurk Effect

SOUND

VISION

Page 14: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Video demo

video=gasound = bacombo= da

Page 15: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory
Page 16: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Background resting activity -- note more activity in frontal regions

Green = averageblue = lessred = more

Page 17: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Looking around

Frontal eye fields

Visual cortex

Page 18: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Listening to words

WERNICKE’S AREA

Auditory cortex

Page 19: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Counting out loud

Supplementarymotor area

BROCA’S AREA(speech production)

WERNICKE’S AREA(speech understanding)

Page 20: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Internal speech -- counting in your head

?????

Page 21: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

Internal speech -- counting in your head

Frontal regions

NOTBroca or Wernicke’sareas !!!!

Page 22: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory
Page 23: Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 9. olfactory binding protein, olfactory receptors cells continuously regenerate (about every 60 days), cilia (on olfactory

odour quality, no primaries identified in olfactory system, poor tuning of receptors (to chemicals or chemical types) (sharpened by lateral inhibition, inhibitory interneurones, granule cells), Henning smell prism, stereochemical theories based on lock and key partially successful, BUT no receptor sites identified, similar shaped molecules can be associated with different smell perceptions

cells broadly tuned (responding to many different chemicals associated with many different smells)

codingintensity= firing rate/recruitment, quality = distributed pattern code, problems in identifying many smells at once, binding problem

KEYWORDS -- SMELL II