how can tactile receptors be divided? what are examples of cells?
how do Pacinian corpuscles respond to stimuli?
rapidly adapting mechanoreceptor, so its ability to respond is based on unique lamellar accessory structure
-responds w/ single AP for each phase of stimulus
what happens on hairy skin?
slight movement of any hair on the body stimulates hair mechanoreceptors made of nerve fibers entwining base of hair
-although each receptor has unique properties, sensory experiences of touch, pressure, and vibration are different from tactile sensation from normal stimuli
how is “wet” skin felt?
no receptor for “wet” skin, but the combination of all receptors conveys it
what does the two-point discrimination threshhold mean?
ability to differentiate between stimuli of same quality that differ in place, magnitude, and spatial pattern
how do 2-point discriminations differ for fingers, arms, and back?
finger: 2-3 mm (highest innervation and lowest pressure thresholds)
forearm: 20 mm
back: 40 mm (lowest innervation and highest pressure threshold)
how do Merkel’s receptors, Meissner’s corpuscles, and Pacinian corpuscles differ in stimulus resolution?
Merkel’s - slowly adapting, provide spatial recognition
Messner and Pacinian - rapidly adapting, provide timing info
what are the 2 major ascending systems that carry somatosensory info to cerebral cortex?
how does somatosensory info enter spinal cord?
peripheral mechanoreceptors are innervated by afferent axons whose cell bodies lie in dorsal root ganglia
-on entering spinal cord, the large myelinated fibers pass medially into lateral margin of dorsal columns
what is the laminar organization of the spinal cord for somatosense?
what is the somatopic organization of the dorsal columns?
at the level of the spinal cord, the first segregation of sensory information begins
what is the entering central ascending pathway in the brainstem?
nerve fibers entering dorsal columns pass up columns on ipsilateral side to caudal medulla, where they synapse in the dorsal column (cuneate and gracile) nuclei
how are 2nd order neuron receptive fields developed?
at level of dorsal column, nuclei receptor neurons converge onto single second order neurons
lateral inhibition with a punctate stimulus
idealized point source of stimulation
-activates several touch receptors to varying degree, since primary unit influences its own secondary unit plus nearest neighbors
two point discrimination with punctate stimuli
two receptive fields are stimulated by points separated by a third receptive field
what is the second order neurons central ascending pathway in brainstem?
at level of dorsal column nuclei, second order neurons decussate immediately to opposite side in internal arcuate fibers, and continue ascent in medial lemniscus fiber bundle
-thus right side of brain gets input from sensory periphery on left side of brain and vice versa
how is the medial lemniscus organized?
somatotopically
where does the medial lemniscus synapse?
fibers synapse on ventral posterior nucleus of thalamus
how is the VPN organized?
medial and lateral divisions, both receive tactile inputs
how is the representation of body surface in thalamic nuclei?
sensory info about a particular modality from one part of body is processed by collections of neurons that form discrete functional units in thalamus
what is the primary somatosensory cortex?
cortical region that gets somatosensory input from ventral posterior nucleus
-in postcentral gyrus of parietal lobe
where do the medial and lateral divisions of VPN direct?
lateral: projects to medial and superior parts of postcentral gyrus
medial: projects to lateral part of postcentral gyrus
what are the cortical sites of somatosensory processing?
SI can be subdivided into 4 distinct cytoarchitectonic regions designated as Brodmann’s areas 3a, 3b, 1, and 2
-most of thalamic fibers end in 3a and 3b, which then project to 1 and 2
what did Wilder Penfield discover?
stimulation of postcentral gyrus produces tactile sensations in particular parts of opposite side of body