SMELLING!.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Please grab your textbook and sit with your 2 oclock appointment! Discuss two things you learned from mind lab exploration yesterday.
Advertisements

Hearing, Touch, Taste and Smell. Hearing Audition – the sense of hearing.
Olfaction The Sense of Smell.
Psychology: Chapter 4, Section 4
Sense of Smell Olfactory System. SMELL Smell is the most primitive sense Evokes memories Most animals use smell to distinguish good from bad In humans,
The human senses: Smell The sense of smell, called olfaction, involves the detection and perception of chemicals floating in the air.
I CAN Identify the location of transduction for each sense.
Other Senses W0w5oGVwJ_Q.
The Other Senses. The other Senses The major sense are seeing & hearing –Without our sense of Touch Taste Smell Body motion & position –Serious handicapped.
The Other Senses Touch, Pain, Taste Smell, Body Movement.
Sensation Taste, Smell and Touch. Objectives Discuss the role of the kinesthetic and vestibular senses in body position, balance, and equilibrium. Discuss.
1. How does our brain determine the direction of a sound? By calculating the slight difference in time that it takes sound waves to reach the two ears.
Taste Four basic tastes –Sweet –Salty –Sour –Bitter Recent discovery of fifth taste –Umami – Japanese word meaning savory or meaty. This sensation of fuller.
Nervous System Supplies information about internal and external environment.
Sensation and Perception Chapter 4
Hearing! Audition  the sense or act of hearing. We hear a best of sounds with frequencies in a range corresponding to that of the human voice. Frequency.
The Remaining Senses Unit 6 Lesson 3. Objectives Review the physical properties of sound and light waves. Compare and contrast the senses of taste and.
Other Senses Touch, Proprioception, Taste, Smell.
Lesson 19 What are sense organs?.
Smell TasteTouchKey Terms College Mascots.
SENSATION 6-8% The process by which our sensory systems receive stimuli from our environment.
Olfaction The Sense of Smell.
Sense Organs The first step in knowing. What does it mean to hear? Sound waves traveling through the air Changes in air pressure that result from vibration.
Chapter 6 Section 4: Other Senses. Taste: Savory Sensations Taste occurs because chemicals stimulate thousands of receptors in the mouth, primarily on.
Other Senses. Taste Papillae – small bumps on the tongue that have taste buds in them. Taste buds - taste receptor cells in mouth; responsible for sense.
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY The Other Senses James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University Worth Publishers.
Light enters through the pupil, and reaches the lens, which focuses light on the retina. The retina contains light sensitive cells called cones and rods.
The Chemical Senses Olfaction detects airborne chemicals –Our sense of smell Gustation detects chemicals in solution that come into contact with receptors.
Other Senses: Taste (Gustation) Module 9: Sensation.
Other Senses: Taste (Gustation) Sensation. Taste Taste is a chemical sense. The receptor cells for taste are the taste buds.
The Human Senses. How does our body enable us to TASTE & SMELL? Sensory nerves associated with taste and smell are located in the mouth and nasal cavity.
Other Senses MR. CONWAY AP PSYCHOLOGY. Opening Discussion Is pain physical or psychological? Tell me why! Be sure to include: ◦Experiences, prior knowledge,
PSYCH JOURNAL 10/10/2013 How do you experience pain? Do injuries cause you intense pain or mild pain? Do you think your mind has a role in controlling.
Touch, Taste, Smell, Balance ontent/senses/touch/
Other Senses AP Psychology| Mrs. Hensley. Touch When our skin is indented, pierced or experiences a change in temperature, our sense of touch is activated.
OTHER SENSES UNIT 4 Modified PowerPoint from: Aneeq Ahmad -- Henderson State University. Worth Publishers © 2007.
The Role of Your Other Senses Unit 2, Psychology Sensation and Perception.
The Other Senses. Taste: Gustatory System Physical stimuli→ chemical substances that are soluble Receptors→ taste cells found in the taste buds that line.
© 2011 South-Western | Cengage Learning A Discovery Experience PSYCHOLOGY Chapter 4Slide 1 LESSON 4.3 Hearing and Your Other Senses OBJECTIVES Explain.
Taste/Gustation Transduced on taste buds Four basic tastes –Sweet –Salty –Sour –Bitter. Spice is not a taste… It is PAIN!! Different people have different.
Sensory Pathways and Sensations Humans can distinguish among many different types of internal and external stimuli because we have highly developed sensory.
DID YOU HEAR THAT?. DID YOU HEAR THAT? Volunteer Time!!
Perceptual organization How do we form meaningful perceptions from sensory information?
Other Senses. Taste Taste is a chemical sense. Receptor cells are located primarily on the tongue and in the mouth. Four different tastes: ◦ Salty, sweet,
Other Senses. THE SKIN SENSES  Pressure, Temperature, Pain  Gate Theory: only a certain amount of information can be processed by the nervous system.
Lauren, Bre, Savhannah, Meg, Evan
Chapter 4 Section 4 & 5 Goal Four: Explain how the skin, chemical, kinesthetic, and vestibular senses work.
Sensation and Perception
How do organisms receive and respond to information from their environment? Yesterday and today you worked with your partners on stations that tested your.
Taste, Smell & Touch Lecture
What is a sensory receptor?
Taste: Smell: Touch.
OTHER SENSES SMELL TASTE SKIN & BODY SENSES.
DID YOU HEAR THAT?.
Taste, Smell, Touch.
Unit 4: Sensation & Perception
Touch 3.11 How does the skin provide pleasant and unpleasant
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)
What is a sensory receptor?
The nose knows.
Other Important Senses: Touch, Taste, and Smell
The Senses – The Nose.
Ms. Saint-Paul A.P. Psychology
AP Psychology Sept. 28th Objective Opener
Unit 3 Lesson 3 How Do Cells Work Together?
Chapter 5 The Other Senses.
Hearing Our auditory sense.
Skin, Tongue, Nose, Ear and Eye
Touch The body or somatic senses includes skin senses, which detect touch, temperature, and pain. Pacinian corpuscles, located beneath the skin, detect.
Psychology Chapter 4 Section 4: Other Senese
Presentation transcript:

SMELLING!

YOUR SENSE OF SMELL The strongest sense tied to memory SCENT IS: ANIMALS – Detect Good from Bad HUMANS – Detect Likes from Dislikes The strongest sense tied to memory

_____________________ where the scent is processed YOUR SENSE OF SMELL Airborne chemicals enter the nose and circulate through the nasal cavity to the _____________________ where the scent is processed olfactory bulb

DID YOU KNOW?

TIME FOR… BATTLE OF THE SENSES!!!

TOUCH!

Touch includes pressure, heat, cold, and YOUR SENSE OF TOUCH Touch includes pressure, heat, cold, and _____________ PAIN

Have you ever hurt yourself and dwelled on the pain so much that it continued to throb and hurt much longer than it probably should have?

Have you ever seriously hurt yourself but somehow didn’t notice the pain?

Pain Theories Gate-Control Theory 1. ____________________________: Pain is felt when a “nerve gate” in the spine allows pain signals to reach the brain If the gate is closed, no pain will be felt!

Have you ever felt pain despite showing no signs of injury or illness?

Can emotional or psychological pain lead to physical pain? Explain.

Pain Theories Neuromatrix Theory 2. ____________________________: Pain originates in the brain and the brain sends pain signals to various parts of the body Can be caused by emotions, expectations, or attention Neuromatrix Theory

HELPS EXPLAIN… PHANTOM PAIN

INTERNAL SENSES Kinesthesis Equilibrium __________________: Controls your voluntary movements __________________: Sense of balance Equilibrium

TIME FOR… BATTLE OF THE SENSES!!!