The Nervous System - Riverside Preparatory High School
... Myelin: whitish, fatty material that covers nerve fibers to speed up nerve impulses Schwann cells: surround axons and form myelin sheath Myelin sheath: tight coil of wrapped membranes Nodes of Ranvier: gaps between Schwann cells ...
... Myelin: whitish, fatty material that covers nerve fibers to speed up nerve impulses Schwann cells: surround axons and form myelin sheath Myelin sheath: tight coil of wrapped membranes Nodes of Ranvier: gaps between Schwann cells ...
Nervous System
... C) Interneurons integrate data and relay appropriate signals to other interneurons or to motor neurons. D) The PNS includes nerves and ganglia. E) The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. ...
... C) Interneurons integrate data and relay appropriate signals to other interneurons or to motor neurons. D) The PNS includes nerves and ganglia. E) The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. ...
Nervous System
... C) Interneurons integrate data and relay appropriate signals to other interneurons or to motor neurons. D) The PNS includes nerves and ganglia. E) The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. ...
... C) Interneurons integrate data and relay appropriate signals to other interneurons or to motor neurons. D) The PNS includes nerves and ganglia. E) The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. ...
1. Cell body
... into the synaptic cleft (via exocytosis) – Neurotransmitters diffuse across gap & bind to receptors on the adjacent neuron – Cause the impulse to continue (if threshold is reached) http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/molecular-mechanism-synaptic-function ...
... into the synaptic cleft (via exocytosis) – Neurotransmitters diffuse across gap & bind to receptors on the adjacent neuron – Cause the impulse to continue (if threshold is reached) http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/molecular-mechanism-synaptic-function ...
The Human Organism: Introduction to Human Body - Nicole
... Take a moment on your computer to research one part of the brain and the role it plays in controlling your body or thought processes. ...
... Take a moment on your computer to research one part of the brain and the role it plays in controlling your body or thought processes. ...
Synapse Notes
... E. Neuronal Pools- varying numbers of neurons in the CNS which receive and transmit impulses into branched systems consisting of hundreds of synapses 1. Facilitation – when one neuron in a neuronal pool becomes more excitable and triggers as a result of various neurotransmitters 2. Convergence- when ...
... E. Neuronal Pools- varying numbers of neurons in the CNS which receive and transmit impulses into branched systems consisting of hundreds of synapses 1. Facilitation – when one neuron in a neuronal pool becomes more excitable and triggers as a result of various neurotransmitters 2. Convergence- when ...
The Nervous System
... (Schwann Cells) – Increases speed of action potentials – Myelin insulates myelinated axons – Makes nerves appear white (white matter) ...
... (Schwann Cells) – Increases speed of action potentials – Myelin insulates myelinated axons – Makes nerves appear white (white matter) ...
Chapt13 Lecture 13ed Pt 1
... • Dendrites – many short extensions that carry impulses to a cell body • Axon (nerve fiber) – single, long extension that carries impulses away from the cell body ...
... • Dendrites – many short extensions that carry impulses to a cell body • Axon (nerve fiber) – single, long extension that carries impulses away from the cell body ...
BOX 2.2 CAJAL: ICONOCLAST TO ICON Santiago Ramón y Cajal
... Cajal saw immediately that it offered great hope in solving the most vexing problem of nineteenthcentury neuroscience: How do adult nerve cells interact with one another? This realization galvanized and directed the rest of his scientific life, which was extremely productive in terms of originality, ...
... Cajal saw immediately that it offered great hope in solving the most vexing problem of nineteenthcentury neuroscience: How do adult nerve cells interact with one another? This realization galvanized and directed the rest of his scientific life, which was extremely productive in terms of originality, ...
“Definitions” section of your binder Central nervous system
... -The nervous system is broken into 2 parts… ->the central nervous system (CNS) ->the peripheral nervous system (PNS) *transmit information from the organs to the CNS and vice versa -All nerves are protected ->brain by the skull and sheathing ->spinal cord by vertebrae -> PNS by sheathing ...
... -The nervous system is broken into 2 parts… ->the central nervous system (CNS) ->the peripheral nervous system (PNS) *transmit information from the organs to the CNS and vice versa -All nerves are protected ->brain by the skull and sheathing ->spinal cord by vertebrae -> PNS by sheathing ...
Neurotoxicology
... Axon degenerates as does the surrounding myelin sheath, however, cell body survives intact Has been termed “dying-back neuropathy”, but this is typically misleading (usually not begin at axon terminals and move toward the soma; rather the toxic effect results in a “chemical transection” of the axon ...
... Axon degenerates as does the surrounding myelin sheath, however, cell body survives intact Has been termed “dying-back neuropathy”, but this is typically misleading (usually not begin at axon terminals and move toward the soma; rather the toxic effect results in a “chemical transection” of the axon ...
AP – All or nothing
... • AP is always the same size • An AP is the same size all the way along the axon. • The transmission of the AP along the axon is the nerve impulse. • Bigger stimulus will cause more frequent action potentials. ...
... • AP is always the same size • An AP is the same size all the way along the axon. • The transmission of the AP along the axon is the nerve impulse. • Bigger stimulus will cause more frequent action potentials. ...
neuron
... Neuron Communication With Other Neurons • In order for one neuron to communicate with another it must pass a junction or gap called the synapse between the axon which is sending the signal and the dendrite which is receiving the signal. • At the ends of the axon, the terminal buttons release neur ...
... Neuron Communication With Other Neurons • In order for one neuron to communicate with another it must pass a junction or gap called the synapse between the axon which is sending the signal and the dendrite which is receiving the signal. • At the ends of the axon, the terminal buttons release neur ...
The Nervous System
... Cells of the Nervous System Neurons/nerve cells: receive stimuli and transmit action potentials (send and receive information) Cell Body: contains the nucleus and two extensions Dendrites: shorter, more numerous, and receives information (Action Potentials) Axons: single, long “fiber” whic ...
... Cells of the Nervous System Neurons/nerve cells: receive stimuli and transmit action potentials (send and receive information) Cell Body: contains the nucleus and two extensions Dendrites: shorter, more numerous, and receives information (Action Potentials) Axons: single, long “fiber” whic ...
three basic functions of the nervous system
... 1. Sensory neurons – transmit impulses to the spinal cord and brain from all parts of the body - also called afferent neurons 2. Motor neurons – transmit impulses away from the spinal cord and brain to muscles and tissue - also called efferent neurons 3. Interneurons – conduct impulses from sensory ...
... 1. Sensory neurons – transmit impulses to the spinal cord and brain from all parts of the body - also called afferent neurons 2. Motor neurons – transmit impulses away from the spinal cord and brain to muscles and tissue - also called efferent neurons 3. Interneurons – conduct impulses from sensory ...
Neurotransmission Notes
... The unequal distribution of charged particles creates a voltage (known as the resting potential) inside the axon of -70 mV. Transmission: When a dendrite is stimulated: 1. positive ions rush in. If enough rush in (ie, if it reaches threshold), channels at the base of the axon open, allowing even mor ...
... The unequal distribution of charged particles creates a voltage (known as the resting potential) inside the axon of -70 mV. Transmission: When a dendrite is stimulated: 1. positive ions rush in. If enough rush in (ie, if it reaches threshold), channels at the base of the axon open, allowing even mor ...
Axon
An axon (from Greek ἄξων áxōn, axis), also known as a nerve fibre, is a long, slender projection of a nerve cell, or neuron, that typically conducts electrical impulses away from the neuron's cell body. The function of the axon is to transmit information to different neurons, muscles and glands. In certain sensory neurons (pseudounipolar neurons), such as those for touch and warmth, the electrical impulse travels along an axon from the periphery to the cell body, and from the cell body to the spinal cord along another branch of the same axon. Axon dysfunction causes many inherited and acquired neurological disorders which can affect both the peripheral and central neurons.An axon is one of two types of protoplasmic protrusions that extrude from the cell body of a neuron, the other type being dendrites. Axons are distinguished from dendrites by several features, including shape (dendrites often taper while axons usually maintain a constant radius), length (dendrites are restricted to a small region around the cell body while axons can be much longer), and function (dendrites usually receive signals while axons usually transmit them). All of these rules have exceptions, however.Some types of neurons have no axon and transmit signals from their dendrites. No neuron ever has more than one axon; however in invertebrates such as insects or leeches the axon sometimes consists of several regions that function more or less independently of each other. Most axons branch, in some cases very profusely.Axons make contact with other cells—usually other neurons but sometimes muscle or gland cells—at junctions called synapses. At a synapse, the membrane of the axon closely adjoins the membrane of the target cell, and special molecular structures serve to transmit electrical or electrochemical signals across the gap. Some synaptic junctions appear partway along an axon as it extends—these are called en passant (""in passing"") synapses. Other synapses appear as terminals at the ends of axonal branches. A single axon, with all its branches taken together, can innervate multiple parts of the brain and generate thousands of synaptic terminals.