Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections, Books a la Carte Plus Mastering Biology with Pearson eText - Access Card Package (9th Edition)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9780134536347
Author: Martha R. Taylor, Eric J. Simon, Jean L. Dickey, Kelly A. Hogan, Jane B. Reece
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 29, Problem 8TYK
Summary Introduction
To describe: The adaption of an individual when the individual first sit down to read in a coffee shop, the surroundings seem very loud. Yet after a few minutes reading you realize you hardly notice the noise at all.
Introduction: Sensory receptors are sensitive against the stimulus they are receiving from the environment. Sensory receptors respond to the change in stimulus, but if the stimulus is present in the surrounding at a constant rate they generate the adaption in responsiveness according to stimulus.
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Chapter 29 Solutions
Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections, Books a la Carte Plus Mastering Biology with Pearson eText - Access Card Package (9th Edition)
Ch. 29 - Prob. 1CCCh. 29 - Which of the following sensory receptors is...Ch. 29 - Which of the following are not known to be present...Ch. 29 - What do the receptor cells in the lateral line...Ch. 29 - If you look away from this book and focus your...Ch. 29 - Prob. 6TYKCh. 29 - Prob. 7TYKCh. 29 - Prob. 8TYKCh. 29 - Hold your right eye closed. With your left eye,...Ch. 29 - Construct a graph in which membrane potential is...
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- Why is your sense of smell and taste diminished when you have a cold?arrow_forwardInside a recital hall a musician plays a well-known song from the guitar repertoire, to the delight of audience members. A C-major chord is played. Subsequently, the corresponding sound wave, consisting of frequencies 130.8 Hz, 164.8 Hz, and 196 Hz, arrives at a listeners eardrum. Describe what subsequently takes place in the middle ear and in the inner ear (on the Basilian membrane) before the nervous system begins processing the stimulus.arrow_forwardThe ear can distinguish frequency and amplitude in sound waves. This gives the ear the ability to determine what?arrow_forward
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- Describe the processes that occur that allow sound waves arriving at our external ear or pinna to become converted to electrical impulses in the cochlea or inner eararrow_forwardWhat function do the malleus, incus, and stapes bones in the inner ear play in processing sounds? A. The bones transform pressure waves into nerve impulses that the brain recognizes as sound. B. The bones equalize pressure between the middle ear and the atmosphere. C. The bones transmit vibrations to the oval window setting the fluid in the cochlea in motion. D. The bones depolarize or hyperpolarize hair cells depending on the direction they vibrate.arrow_forwardHow do you hear a sound?arrow_forward
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