Number 3 orange square

Senses

scroll down
3

Senses Objectives

Describe the sensory receptors, potential types of information sent to the brain, and common misconceptions for:

  • hearing (audition)
  • taste (gustation)

  • smell (olfaction)

Our senses often work together to create a richer perception of the world.

This is one of a few human biology videos we shot last year while working on our BI 101 animal biology course last summer.

6b3 Senses

Senses connect us to our external and internal environment, analogous to a car’s sensors telling it when something is too close or oil levels are low.

 

A classic book for understanding the significance of sensory input is Hellen Keller’s autobiography “The Story of My Life,” first published in 1903 and written while the author was still in college.

 

shutterstock_119121601

In this section you are comparing and contrasting three different senses: hearing (audition), taste, and smell (olfaction).

Common misconceptions about human senses
Although some parts of the body heal quickly with healthy cells dividing to replace dead or injured cells, some cells like the receptor cells of the ears rarely divide.  This means damage by a single large vibration (sound) can lead to permanent hearing loss.

Ear Repair

Although some parts of the body heal quickly with healthy cells dividing to replace dead or injured cells, some cells like the receptor cells of the ears rarely divide. This means damage by a single large vibration (sound) can lead to permanent hearing loss.
Many older textbooks show a map of taste buds on the tongue with zones of clustered taste receptors.  The tongue actually has assorted taste receptors, not specific regions of taste.

Taste Map

Many older textbooks show a map of taste buds on the tongue with zones of clustered taste receptors. The tongue actually has assorted taste receptors, not specific regions of taste.
When asked about their weakest sense, many people say their sense of smell.  Most people can actually detect thousands of different scents, like the smell of different apple varieties, but the brain has to be taught to identify them.

Best Sense?

When asked about their weakest sense, many people say their sense of smell. Most people can actually detect thousands of different scents, like the smell of different apple varieties, but the brain has to be taught to identify them.
shutterstock_1395341348 (1)
Hearing (Audition)

The ear is analogous to a funnel directing vibrations to the sensory cells located in the cochlea of the inner ear.

The ears have two important sensory roles: hearing and balance.

You may have heard that when you hold a conch or other large shell to your ear, you can hear the ocean.  You are actually hearing ambient noise around you amplified in the shell.  It acts like a small resonating chamber.

shutterstock_387646543
Taste (Gustation)

This model shows the little ridges on the tongue (papillae) that have valleys lined with taste buds.

A magnification of tongue tissue clearly shows the papillae and taste buds.

An unusual stain demonstrates how varied dyes highlight different features.

shutterstock_1455482813
Smell (Olfaction)

Ciliated receptor cells in the nasal epithelium at the roof of the nasal cavity bind to odor molecules, sending signals through an olfactory nerve to the brain.

Dogs have a better sense of smell than humans do, and its not just because they have large moist noses that are often close to the ground.  Dogs, and their ancestors the wolves, have more ciliated receptor cells in their olfactory epithelium.

This scent memory demo demonstrates the hedonic scale you will be using in this guide’s media piece.

Start Your 6B Media Assignment here

For this media piece you are trying a novel (new) sensory experience and describing the experience on the hedonic scale.

First, select a sensation that you have not experienced before.  It could be a new combination of tastes, a new scent, trying a type of music, making a new mix of textures, etc.

The media piece you are turning in includes the following three components:

  1.  An explanation of why you selected this particular sensory experience.
  2.  A description of  the experience.
  3.  A rating of your novel sensory experience using the hedonic scale.

You can submit text, text and photos, and/or a video.

shutterstock_524249152

Note:  Exercise safety in your selection and execution of this media piece.  Also, keep the description appropriate for a wide audience.  In other words, don’t shock the graders.

The next section examines the brain’s role in forming memories and emotions.
3
Check your knowledge.  Can you:

describe the sensory receptors, potential types of information sent to the brain, and common misconceptions for:

  • hearing (audition)?
  • taste (gustation)?

  • smell (olfaction)?

Go back to the Vision Page

Go forward to the Memory & Emotions Page

Brain Guide Contents

Complete all four of these sections before taking the quiz and making your media piece.

Back to Module 6

This week’s overview

This Guide

6B:Brain

Products Information

6B: Quiz & Media

Direct Link to Canvas

Submit Products