Question 1
Question
Sensory neurons are generally unipolar.
Question 2
Question
For special senses, there is a specialised receptor cell that is very sensitive to a particular stimulus which passes an action potential on to the afferent axon.
Question 3
Question
Which of these is not a special sense?
Answer
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Vision
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Hearing
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Taste
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Smell
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Vestibular (balance)
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Touch
Question 4
Question
Which of these are somatic & visceral senses?
Answer
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Touch
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Pain
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Hot/Cold
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Vestibular (balance)
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Body position
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Vision
Question 5
Question
What is it called when a stimulus is converted into an action potential?
Answer
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Translation
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Transduction
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Transferral
Question 6
Question
Choose the correct statement about types of sensory information coding.
Answer
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Modality indicates which type or sensory receptor was activated.
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Intensity is conferred by the strength of action potentials fired.
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The duration of stimulus is conferred by the frequency of action potentials firing.
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The location is conferred by the location of the axon terminal the potential stimulates.
Question 7
Question
The proprioreceptors detect posture and spatial position of muscle by:
Answer
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detecting change of length in sarcomeres
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detecting change of length in muscle spindles
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detecting change of tension in muscle spindles
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detecting change of tension in sarcomeres
Question 8
Question
(choose all correct options)
The Golgi tendon organ:
Answer
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detects change in tension in muscle
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provides a stretch reflex
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protects from muscle tearing
Question 9
Question
The muscle spindles can cause contraction of the muscle while the Golgi tendon organ can cause relaxation of the muscle.
Question 10
Question
Choose the incorrect statement about skin receptors.
Answer
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Pacini's corpuscle are sensitive to changes in pressure and especially sensitive to vibration.
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Ruffini's corpuscle is a stretch receptor with orientation.
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Free nerve endings responsive to pain and itching.
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Merkel's endings/discs and Meissner's corpuscle are deep, non peripheral sensors.
Question 11
Question
Sensors primarily detect change, thus they will adapt to a stimulus and response will decay over time until a new change occurs.
Question 12
Question
Touch receptors are slow adapting, while stretch receptors are rapidly adapting.
Question 13
Question
Choose the incorrect statement about receptive fields.
Answer
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A receptive field is an area which when stimulated activates an associated neuron.
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The smaller the field and denser the adjacent fields the better the discrimination of location.
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The larger the field and sparser the fields the easier it is to discriminate between two points of contact.
Question 14
Question
Choose the correct statements about the somatosensory areas of the cortex.
Answer
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The primary somatosensory cortex sits on the pre-central gyrus.
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The primary somatosensory cortex gives a conscious identification of when and where a stimulus originated.
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The somatic sensory association area is anterior to the primary somatosensory cortex.
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The somatic sensory association area is responsible for meaningful interpretation of information from the primary somatosensory cortex.
Question 15
Question
Size of dedicated mapped area on the primary somatosensory cortex indicates size and density of relevant receptor fields. A large area would indicate many, small, dense receptor fields.
Question 16
Question
Choose the incorrect statement about pain differentiation.
Answer
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Chronic/slow pain is transmitted by axons with a small diameter.
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Chronic/slow pain is transmitted by myelinated axons
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Acute/fast pain is generally somatic.
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Chronic/slow pain is generally visceral.
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Acute pain is transmitted by A fibers.
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Acute pain is transmitted by axons with a large diameter.