5.5 smell and 5.6 taste

pinna
ear canal
eardrum
eustachian tube
cochlea
hammer
stirrup
anvil
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Slide 1: Drag question
BiologieMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 1

This lesson contains 22 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

Items in this lesson

pinna
ear canal
eardrum
eustachian tube
cochlea
hammer
stirrup
anvil

Slide 1 - Drag question

eardrum
earwax
auditory nerve
eustachian tube
Keeps the eardrum flexible
controls the airpressure in your middle ear.
transports impulses to your brain
Passes the vibrations on to your hammer, anvil and stirrup

Slide 2 - Drag question

sound is picked up by the auricle
air in the auditory canal vibrates
The eardrum vibrates
Hammer and anvil vibrate
the stirrup vibrates
fluid in the cochlea vibrates
sensory cells are being stimulated
impulses are made
the auditory nerve brings impulses to the brain

Slide 3 - Drag question

Balance ear
Semicircular ducts --> filled with fluid. 
Detects the direction of movement and acceleration.
Muscles respond, mantains your balance.

Slide 4 - Slide

SENSE
SENSE ORGAN
STIMULUS
SENSORY 
RECEPTOR
nerve cells
Hearing
Sound waves
Ear
Convert stimuli into nerve impulses
Transport nerve impulses 
Form a connection between the senses and the brain

Slide 5 - Drag question

What is smell?

Slide 6 - Mind map

Write down a
specific smell that reminds
you of a place/person.

Slide 7 - Open question

How do you detect smell?

Slide 8 - Mind map

The nose:
- hairs filter out dirt
- snot catches dust and germs

- our nose helps us to smell and to taste

- if you  break your nose you could lose your sense of smell.

Slide 9 - Slide

TO WHICH ORGAN SYSTEM DOES THE NOSE BELONG?
A
MUSCULAR
B
RESPIRATORY
C
CIRCULATORY
D
SKELETAL

Slide 10 - Quiz

Slide 11 - Slide

Olfactory cells

Slide 12 - Slide

Mucus
Dust and germs get trapped
Cilia (little hairs) move it up your nose an throat

Slide 13 - Slide

What are the olfactory cells used for?
A
the exchange of gas molecules
B
clearing the nasal cavity of dust particles
C
they are used for the sense of smell
D
Clearing the bronchiole of dust particles

Slide 14 - Quiz

Which cells hold onto the dust you inhale?
A
Olfactory cells
B
Mucus producing cells
C
Nose hairs
D
Ciliated cells

Slide 15 - Quiz

WHAT TYPE OF BREATHING IS BETTER FOR YOUR HEALTH?
A
BREATHING THROUGH YOUR NOSE
B
BREATHING THROUGH YOUR MOUTH

Slide 16 - Quiz

The Tongue:
Tongue is covered with taste buds.
Chemicals in your food and drink dissolve, this is is how your taste buds detect the taste.

Slide 17 - Slide

tongue
   taste bud
mucus gland       nerve cells
taste bud
sensory cell      


nerve cells

Slide 18 - Slide

The Tongue:
- we taste only five things: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami.
- our nose does most of the tasting

- babies instinctively do not like bitter or sour flavours (protection) 
- your tongue is very strong and made up of 8 muscles

Slide 19 - Slide

How do we call the sensory receptors of the tongue?

Slide 20 - Open question

Which flavours can our
tongue individually taste?

Slide 21 - Mind map

Why do we taste badly when we have a cold?
A
we do taste but because we feel ill our brain doesn’t register the flavours.
B
because the nasal cavity is full of snots and no chemicals get to the receptors
C
because the nerves are broken
D
the taste buds are covered with mucus

Slide 22 - Quiz