PAPER 2 - BIOPSYCHOLOGY - neurons and synaptic transmission Flashcards

1
Q

what are neurons?

A

nerve cells responsible for sending and receiving neurotransmitters

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2
Q

what are the basic underlying structures of neurons?

A

dendrites
cell body
axon
presynaptic terminal

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3
Q

what do dendrites do?

A

receive signals from other neurons or sensory receptors

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4
Q

what does the cell body do?

A

control centre of the neuron

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5
Q

what does the axon do?

A

conducts nerve impulses away from the cell body and towards other neurons

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6
Q

what are the 3 types of neurons?

A

motor - multipolar
relay - multipolar
sensory - unipolar

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7
Q

what are sensory neurons?

A
  • have cell body with 2 stems either side
  • carries sensory information from the body’s sensory receptors to the spinal cord & brain
  • convert information from sensory receptors to neural impulses that travel to the brain and are translated into sensations
  • allows for quick reflexes
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8
Q

what are motor neurons?

A
  • single axon, many dendrites HAS MYELIN SHEATH
  • carries info from CNS to skeletal muscles/glands allowing control of movement & responses of internal systems
  • located in CNS, their axons projected outside CNS and control muscles from synapses
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9
Q

what are relay neurons?

A
  • cell body surrounded entirely by dendrites
  • lie between sensory input and motor output
  • they are neurons within the CNS that interconnect different parts of the CNS
  • pass messages within the CNS and allow sensory & motor neurons to cocmmunicate
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10
Q

what are nerve impulses/action potential?

A

the electrical signal formed when information travels along the axon, away from cell body to axon terminal

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11
Q

what is synaptic transmission?

A

the process where a nerve impulse passes across the synaptic gap/cleft from one neuron to another

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12
Q

what is the synapse?

A
  • small gap between neurons
  • end of one dendrite / cell body of another where neurotransmitters are released, permitting nerve impulses transmitted between neurons
  • includes end of presynaptic neuron and postsynaptic neuron
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13
Q

what are neurotransmitters?

A

chemical substance that transmit nerve impulses across a synapse

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14
Q

what is summation?

A

when multiple changes in voltage triggered by a neurotransmitter release, add up together

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15
Q

when does summation occur?

A
  • if multiple nerve impulses occur in the presynaptic neuron in close succession
  • if multiple nerve impulses occur at synapses on the same postsynaptic neuron at the same time
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16
Q

is the process of summation excitatory/inhibitory?

A

both - excitatory and inhibitory synaptic input on post synaptic neuron

17
Q

what is the process of synaptic transmission?

A
  • transmission of nerve impulses across the synapse is chemical, takes less than a second
  • synaptic vesicles containing neurotransmitters stored at end of axon
  • as nerve impulse/action potential travels down axon terminal, vesicles release neurotransmitter molecules to synapse
  • neurotransmitter molecules diffuse across gap to postsynaptic membrane of next neuron & bind to specialised receptors
  • the whole process has either excitatory or inhibitory effects on postsynaptic neuron
18
Q

what happens after synaptic transmission?

A

neurotransmitter released back into synaptic space

19
Q

the neurotransmitter is cleared from synaptic cleft by which processes?

A

diffusion - some of the neurotransmitter drifts away
break-down - some of the neurotransmitter is broken down by enzymes
re-uptake - some of it is taken back up into the presynaptic neuron, repackages & stored for later release

20
Q

what are excitatory neurotransmitters?

A
  • some neurotransmitters have excitatory effects on postsynaptic neuron (make it more likely to fire)
  • excitatory synaptic connections increase neural activation in the CNS
21
Q

what does an excitatory neurotransmitter binding with a postsynaptic receptor cause?

A
  • causes an electrical change in the cell membrane
  • this results in an excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) making post synaptic cell more likely to fire
22
Q

what are inhibitory neurotransmitters?

A
  • some neurotransmitters have an inhibitory effect on the postsynaptic neuron (makes it less likely to fire)
  • inhibitory synaptic connections decrease neural activation in the CNS
23
Q

what does an inhibitory neurotransmitter binding with a postsynaptic receptor result in?

A

results in inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) making the postsynaptic potential less likely to fire

24
Q

can a nerve cell receive excitatory or inhibitory influences?

A

a nerve cell can receive inhibitory or excitatory influences from several transmitters at the same time

25
Q

what is whether a neuron fires determined by?

A

determined by the sum of all excitatory and inhibitory synaptic input for the postsynaptic cell