Balance
Sound
Taste
Smell
Exterior Influence
100

This body system is responsible for maintaining balance

What is the vestibular system?

100

The conversion of one form of energy to another

What is transduction?

100

The sensory system that detects taste

What is the gustatory system?

100

This organ is responsible for processing our sense of smell

What is the olfactory bulb?

100

This category of drugs alters perceptions and mood

What are psychoactive drugs?

200

These fluid-filled tubes in the inner ear detect head movements using hair cells that are stimulated by the movement of gel within the tubes

What are semicircular canals?

200

This structure in the inner ear contains the primary receptor cells (hair cells) for hearing

What is the cochlea?

200

The five basic tastes

What are sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and savory (umami)?

200

This is the nerve that relays sensory information from olfactory receptors to the olfactory bulb in the brain. When damaged, such as by neuropathy caused by type 1 diabetes, it can result in anosmia. 

What is the olfactory nerve?

200

Hallucinogens including psilocybin and LSD are highly active in this cortex

What is the occipital cortex?

300

This theory explains that motion sickness is experienced when there are discrepancies between sensory input information, especially visual and vestibular information

What is the sensory conflict theory?

300

This is the collective name for the small group of bones in the middle ear that transmit sound waves from the ear drum to the oval window

What are ossicles?

300

These tiny bumps on the surface of the tongue are often confused for taste buds

What are papillae?

300

This vestigial organ should be responsible for sensing pheromones, although that role is now taken over by the sense of smell in humans

What is the Vomeronasal Organ?

300

Upregulation of this neurotransmitter in the visual cortex by LSD is thought to be responsible for hallucinations

What is serotonin? 

400

This condition is caused when otoliths are dislodged from their proper place and float more freely around the inner ear

What is vertigo?

400

These devices provide direct electrical stimulation to auditory nerve fibers for those with sensorineural deafness

What are cochlear implants?

400

The sensations of these two tastes are caused by the stimulation of taste cells by ions (such as Na+ and protons) which enter the cells via ion channels

What are salty and sour?

400

Hippocampus neurons and these neurons are the only two neurons in the brain that are regularly reproduced.

What are olfactory neurons? 

400
These types of receptors are often bound by agonists in "hard" drugs (LSD, Ketamine, Ecstasy, etc.)

What are opioid receptors?

500

These are the two structures within the inner ear that have hair cells with cilia, a gel mass, and otoliths (small calcium carbonate crystals)

What are the saccule and utricle?

500

One way humans are able to differentiate frequencies of sounds that is reliant on the fact that certain regions of the basilar membrane are more sensitive to certain frequencies

What is place coding?

500

The approximate lifespan of taste cells

What is 10-14 days?

500

With combinations of this many olfactory receptors we have, we can sense and remember around 10,000 scents, and differentiate up to 1 trillion scents.

What is 350?

500

This class of neurotransmitter is associated with alertness, motivation, and reward. It includes the NT most commonly affected by recreational drugs. 

What is Catecholamine?