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Nervous System Basics: Neurons
Nervous System Basics: Neurons

... A. Shoulder Tap (cont.) 4. The brain sends a response down a motor neuron to neck muscle. 5. The muscles contracting in the neck cause the head to turn. ...
The Brain and the Spinal cord
The Brain and the Spinal cord

... – Surface layer is the cortex of grey cells, with white matter internal. – The cortex is thrown into folds or folia, separated by transverse fissures – The dentate nucleus is a mass of grey matter • Control of muscle tone and co-ordination of muscle movement on the same side ...
I. Nervous System
I. Nervous System

... The human brain is the center of the human nervous system and is a highly complex organ. The human brain contains roughly 100 billion neurons, linked with up to 10,000 synaptic connections each. Each cubic millimeter of cerebral cortex contains roughly one billion synapses. These neurons communicate ...
rview
rview

... A) It will either produce an action potential or not, depending entirely upon whether it is an excitatory or inhibitory neuron. B) It will integrate the incoming excitatory and inhibitory signals, with its rate of action potentials depending on the relative amount of each type of signal. C) It will ...
The Mammalian Nervous System: Structure and
The Mammalian Nervous System: Structure and

... involuntary functions. ANS has two divisions that work in opposition—one will increase a function and the other will decrease it. Sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions are distinguished by anatomy, neurotransmitters, and their actions. ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Basal Nuclei – islands of gray matter within the white matter Cortex (40% of brain mass) consists of neuron cell bodies, dendrites, and unmyelinated axons (plus glial cells and blood vessels), no fiber tracts, all neurons are interneurons ...
Regents Biology
Regents Biology

... bound involuntary together by actionsconnective those not tissue. For under this conscious Research reason, controla Visit the single such as Glencoe spinal your heart Science nerve rate, can Web site at have breathing, tx.science. impulses digestion, glencoe.co going and to m forfrom more and gland ...
Amsterdam Brn Adapt View P3
Amsterdam Brn Adapt View P3

... Turner and Greenough (1983, 1985) that there were more synapses per neuron in upper layers of the visual cortex in rats that had been reared from weaning in a complex environment. This rearing and adult housing paradigm, pioneered by Hebb (1949) and his students (e.g. Hymovitch, 19xx) using behavior ...
Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves
Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves

... • Cranial nerves: part of PNS arise directly from brain. Two pairs arise from cerebrum; ten pairs arise from brainstem ...
Chapt13 Lecture 13ed Pt 2
Chapt13 Lecture 13ed Pt 2

... • The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. • Both are protected by • ________ – skull and vertebral column • ___________ – 3 protective membranes that wrap around CNS • _______________ (CSF) – space between meninges is filled with this fluid that cushions and protects the CNS ...
Chapter-01
Chapter-01

... The brain is the most complex organ in the human body. It is the centre of all the peculiar characteristics which make man unique. The brain is protected inside a hard case called skull. The three layered covering of the brain is called meninges. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fills between the inner ...
Studying the Brain`s Structure and Functions: Spying on the Brain
Studying the Brain`s Structure and Functions: Spying on the Brain

... of the body. Made up of neurons with long axons and dendrites, the peripheral nervous system encompasses all the parts of the nervous system other than the brain and spinal cord. There are two major divisions—the somatic division and the autonomic division. The somatic division specializes in the co ...
Slide 1 - Cloudfront.net
Slide 1 - Cloudfront.net

... 23.Within a nerve, each axon is surrounded by endoneurium, a delicate layer of loose connective tissue that also encloses the fiber’s associated myelin or neurilemma sheath. Groups of fibers are bound into bundles called: ...
4 lesson_15.4
4 lesson_15.4

... The cerebrum is divided into two hemispheres that communicate with each other. The left hemisphere is the center for language and reasoning; the right hemisphere is the center for processing music and ...
Chapter 3 The Nervous System and the Brain
Chapter 3 The Nervous System and the Brain

... The spinal nerves and the peripheral nervous system can be divided into four categories. The Somatic afferent, the Somatic efferent, the Visceral afferent, and the Visceral efferent. Somatic afferent neurons are sensory indicators that conduct impulses and send information to and from receptors in ...
Wolfram Technology Conference 2016, Urbana
Wolfram Technology Conference 2016, Urbana

... calculated this time. Sensitivity to the strength and connectivity of the network appears as one of the most striking features. The study was limited to synaptic connections that do not change over time (strength of the connection remains constant). This limitation might miss the fact that synaptic ...
Letter to Teachers
Letter to Teachers

... bad breath, pimples, muscle shakes, and even death. Still want it? Some people do. That’s how badly people addicted to drugs crave them. To find out why, you have to look inside the human brain. Drugs change the way your brain works. To send messages in the brain, your brain cells or neurons release ...
Nervous System - The Beat@KUMC
Nervous System - The Beat@KUMC

... years ...
Nervous System
Nervous System

... which has changed a variable from its set point • from eyes, skin, blood vessels, ears, digestive tract, joints, muscles, lungs… • Integration – interpretation of sensory information by the CNS • type, location and magnitude of stimulus • Transmit motor information – propagate APs from the CNS to va ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... a. Anatomy. We know a lot about what is where. But be careful about labels: neurons in motor cortex sometimes respond to color. Connectivity. We know (more or less) which area is connected to which. We don’t know the wiring diagram at the microscopic level. wij ...
Nervous System
Nervous System

... which has changed a variable from its set point • from eyes, skin, blood vessels, ears, digestive tract, joints, muscles, lungs… • Integration – interpretation of sensory information by the CNS • type, location and magnitude of stimulus • Transmit motor information – propagate APs from the CNS to va ...
Understanding the Brain`s Emergent Properties
Understanding the Brain`s Emergent Properties

... We now ask several questions to ourselves and the research community. Answers to these questions would be useful in understanding emergence, general intelligence and specifically human intelligence. How many midpoints or layers would be in a rule abstraction hierarchy model of a brain? If there are ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... Neurons ...
3 The Third-Person View of the Mind
3 The Third-Person View of the Mind

... potential is started at the dendrites it cannot be stopped; it quickly spreads through the cell body and down the axon. In less scientific terms, tickling a dendrite causes the nerve cell to pop, sending a short electrical pulse from one end to the other. Although the action potential only lasts abo ...
CMPE 80A - Courses
CMPE 80A - Courses

... §  Consists of cerebrum, cerebellum, brain stem §  If an area is damaged (e.g., traumatic brain injury) or the blood supply is interrupted (e.g., cerebral vascular accident or stroke), the related function is lost §  Sometimes other brain areas can take over those functions (plasticity) ...
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Brain



The brain is an organ that serves as the center of the nervous system in all vertebrate and most invertebrate animals. Only a few invertebrates such as sponges, jellyfish, adult sea squirts and starfish do not have a brain; diffuse or localised nerve nets are present instead. The brain is located in the head, usually close to the primary sensory organs for such senses as vision, hearing, balance, taste, and smell. The brain is the most complex organ in a vertebrate's body. In a typical human, the cerebral cortex (the largest part) is estimated to contain 15–33 billion neurons, each connected by synapses to several thousand other neurons. These neurons communicate with one another by means of long protoplasmic fibers called axons, which carry trains of signal pulses called action potentials to distant parts of the brain or body targeting specific recipient cells.Physiologically, the function of the brain is to exert centralized control over the other organs of the body. The brain acts on the rest of the body both by generating patterns of muscle activity and by driving the secretion of chemicals called hormones. This centralized control allows rapid and coordinated responses to changes in the environment. Some basic types of responsiveness such as reflexes can be mediated by the spinal cord or peripheral ganglia, but sophisticated purposeful control of behavior based on complex sensory input requires the information integrating capabilities of a centralized brain.The operations of individual brain cells are now understood in considerable detail but the way they cooperate in ensembles of millions is yet to be solved. Recent models in modern neuroscience treat the brain as a biological computer, very different in mechanism from an electronic computer, but similar in the sense that it acquires information from the surrounding world, stores it, and processes it in a variety of ways, analogous to the central processing unit (CPU) in a computer.This article compares the properties of brains across the entire range of animal species, with the greatest attention to vertebrates. It deals with the human brain insofar as it shares the properties of other brains. The ways in which the human brain differs from other brains are covered in the human brain article. Several topics that might be covered here are instead covered there because much more can be said about them in a human context. The most important is brain disease and the effects of brain damage, covered in the human brain article because the most common diseases of the human brain either do not show up in other species, or else manifest themselves in different ways.
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