Question 1
Question
Sensory Pathways:
[blank_start]Dorsal Column/Medial Lemniscus System[blank_end] Discriminatory touch, pressure, vibration, proprioception
[blank_start]Spinothalmic Tract[blank_end] Pain, Thermosensation, itch, tickle
Question 2
Question
Third order neurons of the sensory pathways tend to originate in the [blank_start]Thalamus[blank_end] and project to the [blank_start]Primary Somatosensory Cortex[blank_end] (AKA the [blank_start]Postcentral[blank_end] Gyrus)
Question 3
Question
Label the parts of the sensory and motor pathways shown below.
Answer
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Dorsal Column
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Spinothalamic Tract
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Ventral Corticospinal Tract
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Lateral Corticospinal Tract
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Lateral Vestibulospinal Tract
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Medullary Reticulospinal Tract
Question 4
Question
The Dorsal Column is split into 2 parts, the fasciculus gracilis and fasciculus cuneatus. Which is which and what do they innervate?
Question 5
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The vertebral level where sensory information stops travelling via the fasciculus cuneatus and starts travelling in the fasciculus gracilis is ...
Question 6
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In terms of the dorsal column medial lemniscus pathway, [blank_start]2nd[blank_end] order neurons cross collectively at the great sensory decussation and ascend in the [blank_start]medial lemniscus[blank_end] to the [blank_start]Ventral Posterior Lateral (VPL)[blank_end] nucleus of the thalamus
Question 7
Question
The Dorsal Column Medial Lemniscus pathway allows for Stereognosis. What is this?
Answer
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The ability to recognise sounds by the vibrations they cause
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The ability to recognise an object by feeling it
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The ability to identify the magnitude of certain vibrations
Question 8
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[blank_start]Lateral Inhibition[blank_end] is the way in which an active neuron inhibits the activity of its neighbours via inhibitory interneurons
Answer
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Lateral Inhibition
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Adjacent Inhibition
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Lateral Depression
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Adjacent Depression
Question 9
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The somatosensory cortex has how many cell layers?
Question 10
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As information is conveyed from one neuron to the next in a sensory pathway, differences in the activity of adjacent neurones are amplified. This phenomenon is called [blank_start]contrast enhancement[blank_end]
Question 11
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Lateral inhibition allows a more focussed idea of where a sensation has occurred in the body and is facilitated by a certain type of neuron. These neurons are called [blank_start]interneurons[blank_end]