Want this question answered?
Amygdala cells change their firing rate in response to the presentation of emotionally-relevant stimuli. these responses cut across sensory domains (vision, audition) and can be conditioned (the sight of a syringe that was previously used to inject bitter substances in the mouth of the subject).
chemicals, light, temperature
Stimuli itself is of two types - external stimuli and internal stimuli. External stimuli refers to touch, pressure, heat etc. Internal stimuli refers to the stimuli produced by body components - like hormones etc.
A complex movement is made up of what two types of movement?
Plants
Tropic responses are called tropism. It is the growth or turning movement of plants in response to an environmental stimulus. Nastic movements are non-directional responses to stimuli, independent of the stimulus's position.
There are many types of stimuli, it all depends on what the body is reacting to. There may be stimuli from someone smacking you, which would result in a pain response. There can also be visual stimuli, like seeing old pictures, which results in a nostalgic feeling.
Tropism and tactic movements are both types of responses exhibited by organisms to external stimuli, but they differ in their nature and mechanisms: Similarities: Response to Stimuli: Both tropism and tactic movements involve responses to external stimuli, which can include light, temperature, chemicals, gravity, or touch. Directed Responses: They both involve directional movements or growth in response to stimuli, aiming to optimize the organism's interaction with its environment. Differences: Nature of Response: Tropism: Tropism refers to the growth or movement of a plant or organism in response to an external stimulus. It's typically a slower, more gradual and permanent response, often involving growth towards (positive tropism) or away from (negative tropism) the stimulus. Tactic Movement: Tactic movements are rapid, often reversible movements exhibited by entire organisms or specific parts of organisms in response to a stimulus. These movements are usually immediate and aim to bring the organism closer to or move it away from the stimulus. Types of Organisms Involved: Tropism: It is commonly observed in plants, where responses such as phototropism (response to light) or gravitropism (response to gravity) can cause directional growth. Tactic Movement: This is more commonly observed in motile organisms like animals, where responses like phototaxis (movement towards light) or chemotaxis (movement towards or away from chemicals) occur. Mechanisms Involved: Tropism: Tropism involves growth responses, often due to differential growth rates or hormonal changes in specific parts of the organism in response to the stimulus. Tactic Movement: These movements involve the coordination of muscles or specialized cellular structures that enable rapid movement, such as flagella or cilia in single-celled organisms or muscle contractions in multicellular animals. In summary, while both tropism and tactic movements are responses to external stimuli, tropism involves slower, growth-based responses primarily observed in plants, whereas tactic movements are rapid, often reversible movements seen in motile organisms like animals and some single-celled organisms.
Humoral Stimuli, Neural Stimuli, Hormonal Stimuli
Stimuli are composed of two types: The Internal Stimuli and External Stimuli. Under internal stimuli are homeostatic imbalances and blood pressure. On the other hand, external stimuli are vision, touch and pain, taste, smell, equilibrium and sound.
Pavlovian conditioning can lead to a variety of responses, including acquisition (learning the association between the conditioned and unconditioned stimuli), extinction (weakening of the conditioned response when the CS is no longer paired with the UCS), spontaneous recovery (reappearance of a conditioned response after a rest period), generalization (responding to stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus), and discrimination (ability to differentiate between similar stimuli).
The mall uses a variety of stimuli. Visual stimuli involves signs, lighting, models, and colors. Scents are used in various stores. Some stores have signature scents. Other places spray perfume samples. Food court hands out samples for taste stimuli. Music is used in a variety of shops to target specific types of shoppers.
Visual, tactile, auditory, olfactory, taste These are the most broad. They can be much more specific such as, just for Auditory: Verbal, Somatic, musical... It could also be very abstract. A stimuli can pretty much anything that solicits a response. Cause and effect.
Amygdala cells change their firing rate in response to the presentation of emotionally-relevant stimuli. these responses cut across sensory domains (vision, audition) and can be conditioned (the sight of a syringe that was previously used to inject bitter substances in the mouth of the subject).
No, both animals and plants are capable of movement. While animals have the ability to move from one place to another, plants exhibit different types of movements such as growth towards a light source (phototropism) or in response to touch (thigmotropism).
The three types of neurons that function to respond to physical stimuli are the same ones that react to over exhaustion and triangles. I hope this helped.
. . . of responding to stimuli.