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Neurotransmitters
Neurotransmitters

... • After a neuron fires, if reuptake is blocked, the lingering neurotransmitters in the synapse will continue to be absorbed by the receiving neuron until it is gone. • Therefore, a lingering feeling ...
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 4

... – process by which a sense organ changes or transforms physical energy into electrical signals that become neural impulses and are sent to the brain – Sensory Receptors: (where transduction takes place) specialized cells that detect certain forms of energy ...
Document
Document

... between inside and outside of cell • The action potential is a self-propagating event that begins at a dendrite and travels down the axon to the end of the neuron. ...
19.11 STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF THE
19.11 STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF THE

... disc membranes, which undergo a steady daily turnover, being progressively shed at the outer segment tips and then phagocytosed by adjacent RPE cells. Rods are narrow, cylindrical cells for dim light perception that produce visual images in shades of gray. Cones are larger, shorter, conical cells th ...
Generally Physiological - The Journal of General Physiology
Generally Physiological - The Journal of General Physiology

... This month’s installment of Generally Physiological focuses on mechanisms that govern negative thermotaxis in flies and worms, and how the same neuropeptide acts at distinct sites to control the timing and location of fly metamorphosis. The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, like other animals, will ...
The Nervous System
The Nervous System

... In many ways, the cell body is similar to other types of cells. It has a nucleus with at least one nucleolus and contains many of the typical cytoplasmic organelles. It lacks centrioles, however. Because centrioles function in cell division, the fact that neurons lack these organelles is consistent ...
Bio70 Psychobiology Fall 2006 First Midterm October 12 Version A
Bio70 Psychobiology Fall 2006 First Midterm October 12 Version A

... sure to put the test version number on your Scantron. You must turn in both the test and the Scantron. We will not grade any Scantron without an accompanying test. Show your ID when you turn in your test. You may write on the test but you must put the answers to each question on your Scantron. We wi ...
Lecture 2 - Computer Science
Lecture 2 - Computer Science

... •The light hits surfaces and interacts with them, with some being reflected, some absorbed and some transmitted. •The reflected light may bounce off multiple surfaces before reaching the eye. •Some of the light rays will eventually reach the eye and be focused on the retina. •We will diagram this in ...
Nervous System Lecture Notes Page
Nervous System Lecture Notes Page

... Sensory Receptors Receptors are sensitive only to specific stimuli Free nerve endings (pain, temp, itch, tickle) Encapsulated nerve endings - Meissner’s & Pacinian corpuscles, Stretch receptors Complex, clusters of cells (sound, light, taste, balance) ...
File
File

... The nervous system receives information from the _____________ through our senses and it controls how the body reacts to that information The nervous system maintains ________________by coordinating ______ the body systems The nervous system is the center for ______________ and _____________ The sen ...
The NEURON
The NEURON

... •Can have myelin ...
The NEURON
The NEURON

... •Can have myelin ...
Objectives: 1. For normal neurons, understand structure and function
Objectives: 1. For normal neurons, understand structure and function

... IB. Neurons- pathological changes B. Neurons - Pathological reactions Neurons are more sensitive to injury than other cell types in the CNS. There may be selective vulnerability of groups of neurons to specific types of processes. The following information describes types of neuronal reactions occur ...
04 Physiology of large hemispheres, cerebellum
04 Physiology of large hemispheres, cerebellum

... Effects of Aging on the Nervous System As a person ages, there’s a gradual decline in sensory function because the number of sensory neurons declines, the function of remaining neurons decreases, and CNS processing decreases. In the skin, free nerve endings and hair follicle receptors remain largel ...
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File

... This structure controls reflexes and carries sensory and motor messages to and from the brain. ...
Biology 621 - Chapter 12 Midterm Exam Review
Biology 621 - Chapter 12 Midterm Exam Review

... 24.Sensory neurons carry impulses from receptors to the spinal cord. 25. What are the two major division of the peripheral nervous system? autonomic &somatic 26 Nervous system subdivision that is composed of the brain and spinal cord.CNS 27.The neuron is the basic functional unit of the nervous syst ...
02QUIZ02 ( 44K)
02QUIZ02 ( 44K)

... E) medulla ...
auditory association cortex
auditory association cortex

... By the end of today’s class, you should be able to: 1. identify the locations and functions of the primary cortex, secondary cortex, and association areas for the auditory system. 2. discuss the three primary causes of deafness. 3. explain how cochlear implants restore auditory ability. ...
Circuits, Circuits
Circuits, Circuits

... These are non-intersecting pathways but are drawn together to illustrate their similarities. ...
Chapter 3
Chapter 3

... • Inside the neuron has a negative ionic charge • (negative inside/positive outside) = resting potential • Neurons are selectively permeable (usually blocking POSITIVELY charged sodium ions until given the signal to fire • Depolarization occurs when neurons allow sodium ions inside causing neurologi ...
An Introduction to the Special Senses
An Introduction to the Special Senses

... Provides route for blood vessels and lymphatics that supply tissues of eye Regulates amount of light entering eye Secretes and reabsorbs aqueous humor that circulates within chambers of eye Controls shape of lens, which is essential to focusing ...
Sensation and Perception
Sensation and Perception

... The ability to perceive something without ordinary sensory information ...
Nervous System Part 1
Nervous System Part 1

... About 1 trillion (1012) neurons in the nervous system outnumber the neurons by as much as 50 : 1 Neuroglia or glial cells  Support and protect the neurons  Bind neurons together and form framework for nervous tissue  In fetus, guide migrating neurons to their destination  If mature neuron is ...
Chapter 13
Chapter 13

... An animal’s behavior can be reinforced by electrical stimulation of the brain The best and most reliable location for brain stimulation is the medial forebrain bundle The activity of DA neurons plays an important role in reinforcement:  Mesolimbic system – begins in VTA and projects to amygdala, hi ...
Classes #9-11: Differentiation of the brain vesicles
Classes #9-11: Differentiation of the brain vesicles

... Below are many additional questions on lectures. Questions numbered 47-63 will be covered in class sessions 9-11. The first 46 questions are for review, and can be answered from earlier lectures. Many of these questions are answered in the readings as well. 1. The forebrain probably expanded in evol ...
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Feature detection (nervous system)

Feature detection is a process by which the nervous system sorts or filters complex natural stimuli in order to extract behaviorally relevant cues that have a high probability of being associated with important objects or organisms in their environment, as opposed to irrelevant background or noise. Feature detectors are individual neurons – or groups of neurons – in the brain which code for perceptually significant stimuli. Early in the sensory pathway feature detectors tend to have simple properties; later they become more and more complex as the features to which they respond become more and more specific. For example, simple cells in the visual cortex of the domestic cat (Felis catus), respond to edges – a feature which is more likely to occur in objects and organisms in the environment. By contrast, the background of a natural visual environment tends to be noisy – emphasizing high spatial frequencies but lacking in extended edges. Responding selectively to an extended edge – either a bright line on a dark background, or the reverse – highlights objects that are near or very large. Edge detectors are useful to a cat, because edges do not occur often in the background “noise” of the visual environment, which is of little consequence to the animal.
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