Examples of mechanoreceptor in the following topics:
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- Small, finely-calibrated mechanoreceptors (Merkel's disks and Meissner's corpuscles) are located in the upper layers and can precisely localize even gentle touch.
- The large mechanoreceptors (Pacinian corpuscles and Ruffini endings) are located in the lower layers and respond to deeper touch.
- Both primary somatosensory cortex and secondary cortical areas are responsible for processing the complex picture of stimuli transmitted from the interplay of mechanoreceptors.
- The mechanoreceptors are activated, the signal is conveyed, and then processed.
- Some types of mechanoreceptors have large receptive fields, while others have smaller ones.
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- There are various types of tactile mechanoreceptors that work together to signal and process "touch."
- Mechanoreceptors in the skin are described as encapsulated or unencapsulated.
- There are three classes of mechanoreceptors: tactile, proprioceptors, and baroreceptors.
- Mechanoreceptors sense stimuli due to physical deformation of their plasma membranes.
- Four of the primary mechanoreceptors in human skin are shown.
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- As an example, a type of receptor called a mechanoreceptor possesses specialized membranes that respond to pressure.
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- A similar mechanoreceptor—a hair cell with stereocilia—senses head position, head movement, and whether our bodies are in motion.
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- All of the stereocilia are mechanoreceptors, and when bent by vibrations they respond by opening a gated ion channel (refer to [link]).