HUMAN BIOLOGY

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284 Chapter 14



  1. Detecting substances present in the body fluids that bathe
    them is the function of.
    a. thermoreceptors c. mechanoreceptors
    b. photoreceptors d. chemoreceptors

  2. Which of the special senses is based on the following
    events? Membrane vibrations cause fluid movements,
    which lead to bending of mechanoreceptors and firing
    of action potentials.
    a. taste c. hearing
    b. smell d. vision

  3. Rods differ from cones in the following ways:
    a. They detect dim light, not bright light.
    b. They have a different visual pigment.
    c. They are not located in the retina.
    d. All of the above.
    e. a and b only

  4. The outer layer of the eye includes the.
    a. lens and choroid c. retina
    b. sclera and cornea d. both a and c

  5. The inner layer of the eye includes the.
    a. lens and choroid c. retina
    b. sclera and cornea d. start of optic nerve

  6. Your visual field is.
    a. a specific, small area of the retina
    b. what you actually “see”
    c. the area where color vision occurs
    d. where the optic nerve starts

  7. Match each of the following terms with the appropriate
    description.
    somatic senses a. produced by strong
    (general senses) stimulation
    special senses b. endings of sensory
    variations in neurons or specialized
    stimulus intensity cells next to them
    action potential c. taste, smell, hearing,
    sensory receptor balance, and vision
    d. frequency and number
    of action potentials
    e. touch, pressure,
    temperature, pain,
    and muscle sense


CritiCaL tHinKing



  1. Juanita started having bouts of dizziness. Her doctor asked
    her whether “dizziness” meant she felt lightheaded as
    if she were going to faint, or whether it meant she had
    sensations of vertigo—that is, a feeling that she herself
    or objects near her were spinning around. Why was this
    clarification important for the diagnosis?

  2. Michael, a 3-year-old, experiences a chronic middle-ear
    infection, which is common among youngsters, in part due
    to an increase in antibiotic-resistant bacteria. This year,
    despite antibiotic treatment, an infection became so advanced
    that he had trouble hearing. Then his left eardrum ruptured
    and a jellylike substance dribbled out. The pediatrician told
    Michael’s parents not to worry, that if the eardrum had not
    ruptured on its own she would have had to drain it. Suggest
    a reason why the physician concluded that this procedure
    would have been necessary to cure Michael’s problem.


Figure 14.25 Dangling upside down affects
several organs of equilibrium. What are they?

© Greg Epperson/Shutterstock.com

Recently a team of
researchers at the University
of Florida and University of
Pennsylvania reported they
had successfully used gene
therapy to restore vision in mice that had become blind as the
result of a genetic disease called X-linked retinitis pigmentosa.
Humans also can inherit this disease, in which a defective gene
causes rods and cones in the retina to degenerate. The defect
is passed from a carrier mother to male children who inherit an
affected X chromosome. Affected boys usually are blind by the
time they reach young adulthood. The experimental treatment
involved using a virus to insert working copies of the gene into
the blind mice. After other steps turned on the genes, the mice
gradually regained their eyesight. Although much remains to be
done before the treatment can be approved for use in humans,
researchers are cautiously optimistic that in time gene therapy
may help children born with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa to
regain at least some of their sight.

your Future


© Stan Sholik/Alamy


  1. Jill is diagnosed with sensorineural deafness, a disorder
    in which sound waves are transmitted normally to the
    inner ear but they are not translated into neural signals
    that travel to the brain. Sometimes the cause is a problem
    with the auditory nerve, but in Jill’s case it has to do with a
    problem in the inner ear itself. Where in the inner ear is the
    disruption most likely to be located?

  2. Larry goes to the doctor complaining that he can’t see
    the right side of the visual field with either eye. Where in
    the visual signal-processing pathway is Larry’s problem
    occurring?

  3. In a rock climber like the man pictured in Figure 14.25,
    which organs of equilibrium are activated?


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