B1f Flashcards

1
Q

What does CNS consist of and what is its job?

A
  • the central nervous system’s job is to coordinate the information
  • it consists of the brain and spinal cord
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2
Q

How do we respond to things?

A
  • stimulus (a change in your environment)
  • receptor
  • sensory neuron
  • CNS
  • motor neuron
  • effector (muscle or gland)
  • response
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3
Q

What are reflex actions and how do they work?

A
  • reflex actions are unconscious reactions that stop people from getting hurt.
  • the conscious brain isn’t involved in the reflex arc.
  • the sensory neuron connect to the relay neuron in the spinal cord, which links directly to the right motor neuron.
  • stimulus, receptor, sensory neuron, relay neuron, motor neuron, effector, response
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4
Q

What are neurons?

A
  • nerve cells

- neurons transmit information around the body as electrical impulses

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5
Q

What does a typical motor neuron consist of?

A
  • cell body
  • nucleus
  • axon
  • dendrites (branched ending)
  • insulating sheath
  • synapse
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6
Q

How are neurons adapted to send messages quickly?

A
  • dendrites connect to lots of other neurons
  • the sheath acts as an electrical insulator, it causes the impulse to jump (over it), which speeds up the electrical impulse
  • the axon (they are) long, one long neuron is quicker that lots of shot ones joined together as connecting with another neuron slows the impulse down.
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7
Q

What is a synapse and how are impulses sent across them?

A
  • a synapse is the connection between two neurons
  • the electric impulse triggers the release of neurotransmitter chemicals which diffuse across the gap and bind with the receptor molecules in the membrane of the next neuron.
  • this sets off a new electrical impulse
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8
Q

What do depressants work?

A

-by binding with the receptor molecules on the membrane of the neuron blocking the electrical impulse. This decreases brain activity.

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9
Q

How do stimulants work?

A

-by increasing the amount of neurotransmitter chemical at some synapses, which increases the frequency of impulses along the next neuron.

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10
Q

What is homeostasis?

A

maintaining a constant internal environment.

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11
Q

What is negative feedback?

A
  • a response triggered by changes in the environment to counteract the changes, e.g. a rise in temperature cause a response that lowers the body temperature
  • therefore the internal environment tends to stay around the norm (the level at which the cells work best)
  • if the environment changes too much the it might not be possible to counteract it.
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12
Q

What does our body do if we are too hot?

A
  • hairs lie flat
  • lots of sweat is produced (when sweat evaporates it uses heat energy from the skin. This transfers heat from your skin the environment, cooling you down)
  • vasodilation (blood vessels close to the skin widen to allow more blood to flow near the surface, to radiate more heat to the surrounding)
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13
Q

What does our body do if we are too cold?

A
  • hairs stand on end to trap an insulating layer of air which helps keep you warm
  • very little sweat produced
  • vasoconstriction (blood vessels near the surface constrict so less heat is transferred to the surroundings)
  • shivering generates heat in the muscles
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14
Q

How is body temperature controlled?

A
  • the optimum temperature for enzymes in the human body is 37.
  • there is a thermoregulatory centre in the brain
  • it contains blood temperature sensitive receptors and receives skin temperature information from the skin.
  • the brain can respond to the changes and change the body temperature using nervous and hormonal systems to initiate temperature control systems.
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