CAS BI 211 Study Guide - Final Guide: Fovea Centralis, Visual Acuity, Optic Disc

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When a contentious stimulus of constant strength is applies to a receptor, a progressive decrease in responsiveness of the receptor occurs over time adaptation, caused by a decrease in the frequency of action potentials. The ability to perceive the location of a stimulus requires understanding of the architecture of sensory units, which are comprised of a single sensory neuron and all of the receptor it innervates. The area on the surface of the body over which these receptor are distributed for a given sensory unit is the receptive eld. The precision of the receptive eld depends on: The density of sensory units (product of size and number of receptive elds in a given area). The density of receptors within a receptive eld. All sensory inputs result in the same afferent signals (action potentials) and it is where those actions potentials terminate in the integrating center that determines our perception of the stimuli.

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