A
B
C
D
E
100

Somatosensory receptors differ by which of the following characteristics?

(a) Location in skin layers
(b) Morphology (shape)
(c) Perceptual task
(d) Temporal properties
(e) All of the above are characteristics by whichsomatosensory receptors differ.

(e) All of the above are characteristics by which somatosensory receptors differ.

100

basal ganglia direct pathway

overall excitatory, shorter pathway. activation of this pathway makes making a movement easier

100

hemiballismus


relatively rare HYPERkinetic disorder characterized by involuntary flinging motions of extremities. symptoms increase if patient is active but halts in rest/sleep
- cause: damage to inhibitory pathway of motor loop, especially damage to subthalamic nucleus
- treatments: deep brain stimulation, surgery to remove more basal ganglia, drugs that reduce neural signaling

100

Huntington's chorea

HYPERkinetic disease characterized by cognitive decline and jerky, uncoordinated body movements (chorea) that continue in sleep
- cause: autosomal dominant genetic mutation causing proteins to progressively build up in and kill cortical neurons, esp in inhibitory "indirect" pathway
- treatments: genetic testing to identify risk, medications for symptoms (reduces neural signaling), nutrition management, physical therapy

100

hypokinetic vs hyperkinetic 

decreased movement - increased movement

200

Pain and temperature are carried by different pathways than light touch.

(a) True
(b) False

(a) True

200

basal ganglia indirect pathway

overall inhibitory, longer pathway. activation of this pathway makes making a movement harder; dopamine inhibits the indirect pathway, making it easier to move

200

What is frequency? What perceptual experience is associated with frequency increasing/decreasing?

frequency - 1/cycle duration

directly associated w/ pitch

200

sound pressure wave


a mechanical wave that results from the back and forth vibration of the particles of the medium through which the sound wave is moving, creating sound

200

cortical deafness

form of sensorineural hearing loss caused by bilateral lesions in A1 (in the temporal lobes). patient unable to hear sounds but has no damage to physical ear, can be thought of as the combination of auditory verbal agnosia and auditory agnosia.

patients can still exhibit some reflex responses such as turning their head towards a loud sound.

300

Primary motor cortex is in whichof the following lobes?

a) Frontal
(b) Parietal
(c) Temporal
(d) Occipital

(a) Frontal

300

wavelength and amplitude relationship

wavelength stays constant over distance, but the amplitude decreases

the energy contained in the sound pressure wave is lost as it propagates through the atmosphere (sound gets quieter)

300

What is amplitude? What perceptual experience is associated with amplitude increasing/decreasing?

amplitude - height of a sound wave

directly associated w/ loudness

300

How do sound waves translate in to sound?

sound waves shift air molecules (compression to rarefaction, repeat), creating wavelengths w/ different frequencies that the ear can detect

300

Parkinson's disease


HYPOkinetic disease characterized by akinesia (slowing or loss of movement), rigidity, and a "pill rolling" tremor at rest
- cause: loss of dopamine neurons in basal ganglia, decreasing activity in its excitatory "direct" pathway
- treatments: medications (L-Dopa), fetal neural tissue graft, deep brain stimulation

400

middle ear

from tympanic membrane to oval window. drains out through the eustachian tube to the back of the throat, making it most prone to ear infection

includes ossicular chain (ossicles) that amplify movement of tympanic membrane onto movement of oval window membrane

400

audibility curve

a graph that depicts the relationship between the loudness of a pure tone, expressed in decibels, sound-pressure level (dB SPL), and the frequency of the tone

400

What type of sound are the inner ear and cortex specialized to pick up on?

conversational speech, the frequencies and decibels common for it

400

outer ear


includes the pinna, auditory canal (ear hole), ends of tympanic membrane
- the pinna folds gather and focus sound energy on tympanic membrane, especially important for vertical sound localization

400

tympanic membrane/eardrum

thin membrane that separates external ear from middle ear. transmits sound from the air to the ossicles inside the middle ear.

500

ossicles

the three smallest bones in the human body, contained within the middle ear and transmits/amplifies sounds from the air to the fluid-filled cochlea. absence of the auditory ossicles would cause moderate-to-severe hearing loss.

500

malleus

hammer-shaped small bone of the middle ear which connects with the incus and is attached to the inner surface of the eardrum

500

stapes

stirrup-shaped small bone or ossicle in the middle ear which is attached to the incus and oval window; the bottom of the stapes on the oval window is called the footplate

500

three ossicles of the middle ear

malleus, incus, stapes

500

incus

anvil-shaped small bone or ossicle in the middle ear. connects the malleus to the stapes.