Download 2. Peripheral Nervous System

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Mirror neuron wikipedia , lookup

Neuroplasticity wikipedia , lookup

Resting potential wikipedia , lookup

Perception wikipedia , lookup

Multielectrode array wikipedia , lookup

Time perception wikipedia , lookup

Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup

Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Premovement neuronal activity wikipedia , lookup

Central pattern generator wikipedia , lookup

Embodied language processing wikipedia , lookup

Psychophysics wikipedia , lookup

Neural engineering wikipedia , lookup

Microneurography wikipedia , lookup

Sensory substitution wikipedia , lookup

Neuromuscular junction wikipedia , lookup

Action potential wikipedia , lookup

Neural modeling fields wikipedia , lookup

Electrophysiology wikipedia , lookup

Neural coding wikipedia , lookup

Embodied cognitive science wikipedia , lookup

Caridoid escape reaction wikipedia , lookup

Allochiria wikipedia , lookup

Neuroregeneration wikipedia , lookup

Synaptogenesis wikipedia , lookup

Development of the nervous system wikipedia , lookup

Circumventricular organs wikipedia , lookup

Metastability in the brain wikipedia , lookup

Holonomic brain theory wikipedia , lookup

Nonsynaptic plasticity wikipedia , lookup

Node of Ranvier wikipedia , lookup

End-plate potential wikipedia , lookup

Evoked potential wikipedia , lookup

Chemical synapse wikipedia , lookup

Feature detection (nervous system) wikipedia , lookup

Neuroanatomy wikipedia , lookup

Molecular neuroscience wikipedia , lookup

Single-unit recording wikipedia , lookup

Neurotransmitter wikipedia , lookup

Neuropsychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup

Synaptic gating wikipedia , lookup

Biological neuron model wikipedia , lookup

Rheobase wikipedia , lookup

Axon wikipedia , lookup

Nervous system network models wikipedia , lookup

Stimulus (physiology) wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Honors Biology
Powerpoint #3
Unit 8 – Chapter 35
The Senses Activities
 Brain
 Spinal
Cord
 Peripheral Nerves:
Neurons
 Coordinates
the body’s response
to changes in its internal and
external environments.
Relays messages, processes
information and analyzes information.
 Includes:

◦ Brain
◦ Spinal Cord

Sensory Division:
transmits impulses
from sense organs to
central nervous system.
◦ What are sense
organs?
 Organs designed to
pick up stimuli.
 (ie eyes, ears, nose,
skin)
 Motor
Division: transmits
impulses from the central nervous
system to muscles.
 Network
of Neurons makes up the
peripheral Nervous System.
sensory receptor (sensory input)  integration  (motor output)  effector
1.
Sensory Input
triggered by stimuli
conduction of signals to
brain
2.
Integration
interpretation of sensory
signals by brain
3.
Motor output
conduction of signals to
effector cells (i.e.
muscles, gland cells)
reflex arc pdf

Sensory neuron
interneuron

Without brain processing
motor neuron

Dendrite - conducts “signal” toward the cell body -- [input
zone]
◦ often short, numerous & highly branched
◦ signal comes from sensory cell or neighboring neuron

Axon - usually a single fiber -- [conducting zone]
◦ conducts signal away from cell body to another neuron or effector cell

Axon Ending
◦ a cluster of branches (100’s to 1000’s)
◦ relays signal to next neuron / effector cell
How a nerve impulse is transmitted
1) Resting - The neuron is POLARIZED (-70mV)
There is a slightly negative charge on the inside, and a
positive charge on the outside
◦
◦
◦
◦
This balance is maintained by the sodium-potassium pump
Pumps Na+ (sodium) outside
Pumps K+ (potassium) inside
Some K+ sneaks back out through channels
How a nerve impulse is transmitted
2) Action Potential - stimulus causes opening of Na+
gates, allowing Na+ to rush in
•
This changes the neuron from polarized to de-polarized
•
This is all-or-none, meaning a stimulus must exceed a
threshold for the action potential to occur
How a nerve impulse is transmitted
2) Action Potential - stimulus causes opening of
Na+ gates, allowing Na+ to rush in
•
Intensity of the stimulus is based on the number of
neurons that exhibit action potential.
•
Speed on impulse based on diameter of axon &
amount of myelination.
How a nerve impulse is transmitted
3) Repolarization – K+ moves outside, Na+ stays
inside
◦ After inside flooded with NA+, K+ gates open and let K+
Out (while NA+ gates close)
4) Refractory period – When the Na+/K+ balance
returns to normal (K+ on inside and Na+
outside)
• During this time the neuron will not respond to
new impulses
•
•
Neurons DON’T touch
The gap between the axon of one neuron, and the
dendrites of another is called the SYNAPSE
1. Action potential happens
2. Neurotransmitter is released by axon ending
1. Neurotransmitter is a chemical that sends a
signal
3. Neurotransmitter binds to dendrite membrane
of next neuron
4. Excitation or inhibition of the membrane occurs
5. Neurotransmitter is ‘recycled’

Resembles chain of beads

Allows signal to travel faster because impulse “jumps”
from node of Ranvier to node of Ranvier (with myelin
sheath (225 mph / without 11 mph)