Gustation / Olfaction
Ear / Audition
Eye / Vision
Dysfunction / Special Senses
Equilibrium
100

What type of receptors are used in taste and smell?

Answer: Chemoreceptors

100

What is the function of the cochlea?

Answer: Converts sound waves into neural signals

100

What type of receptors are used in vision?

Answer: Photoreceptors

100

What is anosmia?

Answer: Loss of smell

100

What part of the ear is responsible for balance?

Answer: Inner ear

200

What are the five basic tastes recognized in gustation?

Answer: Sweet, salty, sour, bitter, umami

200

Name the three ossicles in the middle ear.

Answer: Malleus, incus, stapes

200

What are the two types of photoreceptors?

Answer: Rods and cones

200

What is tinnitus?

Answer: Ringing in the ears (phantom sound)

200

Which structures detect head position?

Answer: Utricle and saccule

300

Which ions are responsible for salty and sour taste?

Answer: Na⁺ (salty) and H⁺ (sour)

300

What structure actually vibrates first when sound enters the ear?

Answer: Tympanic membrane (eardrum)

300

Which part of the eye provides the sharpest vision?

Answer: Fovea centralis

300

What is vertigo?

Answer: False sense of movement or spinning

300

Which structures detect rotational movement?

Answer: Semicircular canals

400

How does olfaction differ from other senses in terms of brain pathway?

Answer: It does NOT synapse in the thalamus before reaching the corte

400

What ion is responsible for depolarizing hair cells in hearing?

Answer: Potassium (K⁺)

400

What happens to retinal when light hits it?

Answer: It changes from 11-cis to all-trans (photoisomerization)

400

What causes glaucoma?

Answer: Increased intraocular pressure damaging retinal neurons

400

What role do otoliths play in equilibrium?

Answer: Add weight to membrane to detect gravity and head tilt

500

Explain how taste receptor cells are activated and how signals are transmitted to the brain.

Answer: Chemicals dissolve in saliva, bind to ionotropic receptors → Ca²⁺ influx depolarizes cells → neurotransmitter release → signals travel via facial, glossopharyngeal, and vagus nerves

500

Describe how sound waves are converted into neural signals in the cochlea.

Answer: Sound → tympanic membrane → ossicles → oval window → fluid waves → basilar membrane movement → stereocilia bend → K⁺ influx → depolarization → neurotransmitter release → CN VIII to brain

500

Explain how light is converted into a neural signal in the retina.

Answer: Light hits photopigments → retinal changes shape → activates G-protein → changes membrane potential → less neurotransmitter released → signal passed to bipolar cells → ganglion cells → optic nerve → brain

500

Compare cataracts and glaucoma in terms of cause and effect on vision.

Answer: Cataracts = cloudy lens → blurry vision; Glaucoma = pressure damages retina → permanent vision loss

500

Explain how hair cells detect movement and send signals for balance.

 Answer: Movement shifts fluid → bends stereocilia → opens ion channels → depolarization → signals sent via vestibulocochlear nerve to brain

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