8.1 The nervous system and nerve impulses Flashcards
Reflex arc
- RECEPTORS detect a stimulus and generate a nerve impulse.
- SENSORY NEURONES conduct a nerve impulse to the CNS along a sensory pathway
- Sensory neurones enter the SPINAL CORD through the dorsal route.
- sensory neurone forms a synapse with a RELAY NEURONE
- Relay neurone forms a synapse with a MOTOR NEURONE that leaves the spinal cord through the ventral route
- Motor neurone carries impulses to an EFFECTOR which produces a RESPONSE.
Impulse, Nerve impulse
A wave of electrical activity which passes along a nerve or over the surface of a muscle.
organisation of the nervous system
1 Nervous system > 1.1 Central nervous system - 1.2 Peripheral nervous system. > 1.2.1 Somatic nervous system 1.2.2 Autonomic nervous system> 1.2.2a Sympathetic nervous system - 1.2.2b parasympathetic nervous system
Central nervous system
The brain and spinal cord. The central nervous system is responsible for coordinating and controlling the nervous system.
Peripheral nervous system
subsection of NS
consists of
-sensory nerves
- motor nerves
Autonomic nervous system
The part of the nervous system that is not under conscious control. The nerves of the autonomic nervous system stimulate muscles and glands. The autonomic nervous system is made of up of two parts. The sympathetic system plays an important part in controlling the body’s reactions to stress. The parasympathetic is more important when the body is at rest. The somatic nervous system is under conscious control.
Somatic nervous system
Part of the nervous system which is involved in transmitting impulses from sense organs to the central nervous system and from the central nervous system to the skeletal muscles which are under voluntary control.
Parasympathetic nervous system, Parasympathetic nerve
The part of the autonomic nervous system (the nervous system which you have no control over) that is important when the body is at rest. Stimulation
of the parasympathetic nerves reduces heart and breathing rate but increases muscle action associated with digestion. The vagus nerve is a parasympathetic nerve. It leads from the cardiovascular control centre in the brain to the sinoatrial node in the heart. Nerve impulses passing along this nerve slow the heart beat.
Sympathetic nerve, sympathetic nervous system
One of the nerves that goes from the brain to the organs of the body and which prepares the body for action, controlling the functions of organs during times of stress. For example, sympathetic nerves are involved in increasing heart rate and blood pressure.
Neurone, Sensory neurone, Motor neurone, Relay neurone A nerve cell.
A neurone has a cell body containing a nucleus and long thin branches along which impulses pass. Neurones which carry impulses from receptors are referred to as sensory neurones. Those which transmit impulses to effectors are motor neurones. Relay neurones transmit impulses from one cell to another. Neurone cell bodies are located within the central nervous system. Neurones do not join directly to each other. They are separated by tiny gaps called synapses
Cell body
Part of a neurone which contains the nucleus and many of the other cell organelles. Long processes extend from the cell body. These are the dendrites, which conduct impulses towards the cell body, and an axon, which conducts impulses away.
Dendrite
One of the processes on a nerve cell or neurone which carries impulses towards the cell body.
Axon
A long process extending from a neurone which carries impulses away from the cell body.
motor neurone
cell body is always situated within the central nervous system(CNS) and the axon extends out, conducting impulses from the CNs to effectors.
sensory neurone
these carry impulses from sensory cells to the CNS
relay neurone
these are found mostly within the CNS. They can have a large number of connections with other nerve cells.
Myelin, Myelin sheath, Myelination
Fatty material which forms a layer round the axons in many mammal neurones. It acts as an insulator and only allows the electric currents which are set up by an action potential to flow at the gaps where no myelin is present. Nerve impulses therefore travel along myelinated axons in a series of jumps. This allows them to transmit impulses much faster than non-myelinated neurones.
Schwann cell, Schwann cells
A cell that produces myelin, the fatty material that surrounds many axons in mammalian nerve cells. Each Schwann cell wraps round and round the axon forming a layer of myelin. The small gaps between neighbouring Schwann cells, called nodes of Ranvier, allow a nerve impulse to travel along a myelinated axon in a series of jumps.
Reflex
A simple pattern of behaviour which involves a rapid response to a stimulus. For example, if the hand touches a hot object, it is rapidly withdrawn. Most nerve pathways involve many neurones. A reflex, however, usually only involves two or three. This explains why reflexes are very rapid.
Reflex arc
The nerve pathway associated with a reflex. Some reflexes, such as the knee-jerk reflex, only involve two neurones: a sensory neurone and a motor neurone. Others, such as that involving the withdrawal of the hand after touching a hot object, involve three neurones. These are a sensory neurone, a relay neurone and a motor neurone.
Receptor, Receptor cells
Receptor cells that detect stimuli and send impulses to the central nervous system. Many receptors are spread throughout the body, but some types of receptor cells are grouped together into sense organs. Rods and cones are the receptor cells in the eye that detect light.
Effectors, Effector cells
A tissue or organ that responds to a nerve impulse or hormone. An effector brings about a response or a change. In a mammal, muscles and glands are examples of effectors