General Senses/ Special Senses
Vision
The Ears
Taste & Smell
Grab Bag
100

These sensory receptors sense changes in temperature.

What are thermoreceptors?

100

The area of the retina where the optic nerve exits the eye.

What is the blind spot or optic disc?

100

The sensory receptor type for the sense of hearing.

What are mechanoreceptors?

100

The primary taste sensations.

What are sweet, sour, salty, and bitter, umami

100

The white part of the eye.

What is the sclera?

200

The five special senses.

What are Vision, Hearing, Equilibrium, Smell, Taste?

200

Pulls on the lens to focus your vision

ciliary body (attached by suspensory ligaments)

200

The funnel-shaped portion of the external ear.

What is the auricle or pinna?

200

The type of receptor used for smell and taste.

What are chemoreceptors?

200

The type of sensory receptor that senses light and color.

What are photoreceptors?

300

The sense organs.

What are the eyes, ears, nose, tastebuds, and skin.

300

Photoreceptors that detect color and light in brightness.

What are cones?

300

Sequence of ossicles from eardrum to inner ear.

What is Malleus, Incus, Stapes?

300

The sensitive parts of taste receptor cells.

What are taste hairs?
300

The portion of the eye through which light is bent the most.

What is the lens?

400

Sensations that are sensed by the general sense organs.

What are touch, pressure, pain, temperature, and chemical stimuli?

400

The dark, vascular layer that supplies nutrients to the retina and reduces light reflection in the eye.

What is the Choroid Coat?

400

This ossicle that taps on the oval window.

What is stapes?

400

Fluid that is necessary for dissolving food molecules, enabling them to be detected.

What is saliva?

400

The clear layer on the outside of your eye that helps to bend light.

What is the cornea?

500
A phenomenon in which visceral pain may feel as if it is coming from a part of the body other than the part being stimulated.

What is referred pain?

500

The area of the retina that has the highest concentration of cones.

What is the fovea centralis?

500

This contains two membranous sacs that provide sensations of gravity and movement of head when stationary

vestibule

500

Taste buds are hidden from the mechanical stress of chewing because they lie along the sides of these epithelial projections...

papillae

500

What is the primary function of the lacrimal apparatus?

produce tears for the eye

600

This tactile receptor is abundant in hairless areas of skin and senses light touch, pressure, and low frequency vibrations.

Tactile (Meissner) Corpuscles

600

The phenomenon in which the ciliary muscles and suspensory ligaments enable the lens to adjust shape to facilitate focusing.

What is accomodation?

600

The bony labyrinth surrounds and protects these canals which are a collection of tubes and chambers that follow the contours of the surrounding bony labyrinth and filled with endolymph

Membranous labyrinth

600

The three nerves on which taste sensory impulses travel.

What are the facial, glossopharyngeal, and vagus nerves?

600

The structure that enables your ears to maintain equal air pressure on either side of the tympanic membrane.

What is the auditory tube (eustachian tube)?

700

These large receptors respond to heavy pressure and high-frequency vibrations and are found in deeper dermal/subcutaneous tissue, joint capsules, and the walls of the urethra and urinary bladder

Lamellated (Pacinian) Corpuscles

700

The photoreceptors that help you to see in dim conditions.

What are rods?

700

The organs of dynamic equilibrium.

What are the semicircular canals?

700

What is the path of a smell as it travels through the nose to the brain (hint: turns chemical into electrical)

substance being smelled, picked up by olfactory receptor cells, into olfactory nerve fibers, to the olfactory bulb, through the olfactory tract to the brain

700

The structure within the cochlea where the hair cells are bent against to pick up sound vibrations.

What is the tectorial membrane?