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What is the definition of sensation?
Conscious or unconscious awareness of external or internal stimuli.
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What does decussation mean in neural anatomy?
Crossing (nerve fibres crossing to the opposite side).
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What do the terms contralateral and ipsilateral mean?
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How are ascending sensory tracts organized from receptor to cortex?
They carry sensory information from peripheral receptor → dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and travel in a three‑order neuron chain to the primary somatosensory cortex in the post‑central gyrus.
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Which cortical area receives ascending somatosensory information?
Primary somatosensory cortex in the post‑central gyrus.
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Where is the 1st order neuron cell body located in sensory pathways?
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Do the axons of 1st order sensory neurons cross (decussate)?
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Where are 2nd order sensory neurons located?
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Do the axons of 2nd order sensory neurons cross (decussate)?
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Where is the 3rd order sensory neuron located?
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Do the axons of 3rd order sensory neurons cross (decussate)?
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What is the definition of 'decussation' in neuroanatomy?
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What defines a white matter tract (bundle or fasciculus)?
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What are 'long tracts' and their general directions?
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What general role do long tracts serve between brain and spinal cord?
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Name major ascending tracts listed in the spinal cord cross-section.

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Which anatomical feature in the spinal cord is explicitly named where crossing occurs?
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Where does the text state decussation occurs apart from the spinal cord?
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Provide a visual diagram showing decussation within the spinal cord pathways.

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What types of sensory impulses do ascending tracts carry?
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What are the two main destinations of ascending sensory pathways?
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Describe the three-neuron sequence of conscious ascending pathways.
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Which thalamic nucleus contains the 3rd order neuron for conscious sensory pathways?
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Name spinocerebellar tracts or related pathways mentioned for subconscious proprioception.
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Which spinocerebellar inputs serve the upper body (above T6)?
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Which spinocerebellar inputs serve the lower body (below T6)?
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Which primary afferent fiber types are routed to spinocerebellar tracts in the diagram?
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What structure is mentioned as part of the subconscious pathway entry to the cerebellum?
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What is the definition of sensation?
Conscious or unconscious awareness of external or internal stimuli.
What does decussation mean in neural anatomy?
Crossing (nerve fibres crossing to the opposite side).
What do the terms contralateral and ipsilateral mean?
How are ascending sensory tracts organized from receptor to cortex?
They carry sensory information from peripheral receptor → dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and travel in a three‑order neuron chain to the primary somatosensory cortex in the post‑central gyrus.
Which cortical area receives ascending somatosensory information?
Primary somatosensory cortex in the post‑central gyrus.
Where is the 1st order neuron cell body located in sensory pathways?
Do the axons of 1st order sensory neurons cross (decussate)?
Where are 2nd order sensory neurons located?
Do the axons of 2nd order sensory neurons cross (decussate)?
Where is the 3rd order sensory neuron located?
Do the axons of 3rd order sensory neurons cross (decussate)?
What is the definition of 'decussation' in neuroanatomy?
What defines a white matter tract (bundle or fasciculus)?
What are 'long tracts' and their general directions?
What general role do long tracts serve between brain and spinal cord?
Name major ascending tracts listed in the spinal cord cross-section.

Which anatomical feature in the spinal cord is explicitly named where crossing occurs?
Where does the text state decussation occurs apart from the spinal cord?
Provide a visual diagram showing decussation within the spinal cord pathways.

What types of sensory impulses do ascending tracts carry?
What are the two main destinations of ascending sensory pathways?
Describe the three-neuron sequence of conscious ascending pathways.
Which thalamic nucleus contains the 3rd order neuron for conscious sensory pathways?
Name spinocerebellar tracts or related pathways mentioned for subconscious proprioception.
Which spinocerebellar inputs serve the upper body (above T6)?
Which spinocerebellar inputs serve the lower body (below T6)?
Which primary afferent fiber types are routed to spinocerebellar tracts in the diagram?
What structure is mentioned as part of the subconscious pathway entry to the cerebellum?
Alt text: Sensory pathway from receptor to cortex
Path: 1st order in DRG → ascend ipsilaterally in dorsal columns → synapse in nucleus gracilis/cuneatus (medulla) → 2nd order decussate as internal arcuate fibers → ascend as medial lemniscus → VPL thalamus → cortex.
Spinothalamic tracts (anterolateral system)
Path: 1st order in DRG → synapse in dorsal horn → 2nd order decussate within 1–2 spinal segments via anterior white commissure → ascend contralaterally to VPL → cortex.
Spinocerebellar tracts (subconscious proprioception)
Alt text: Spinal cord cross-section with ascending and descending tracts
Alt text: Diagram showing decussation and contralateral representation
| Order neuron | Location of cell body | Crosses? | Typical relay |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st order | Dorsal root ganglion | No | Peripheral receptor → spinal cord/medulla |
| 2nd order | Spinal cord gray or brainstem nucleus | Yes (usually) | Ascends to VPL thalamus |
| 3rd order | VPL nucleus of thalamus | No | VPL → primary somatosensory cortex |
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