Information Processing Flashcards

1
Q

What do inhibitory neurones do?

A

Release neurotransmitters that HYPERPOLARISE the nerve cell membrane

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2
Q

What do excitatory neurones do?

A

Release neurotransmitters that DEPOLARISE the nerve cell membrane

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3
Q

What is the activity of a nerve determined by?

A

balance of inhibitory and excitatory input

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4
Q

What is a disadvantage of EPSPs (excitatory post synaptic potentials) and how is this overcome?

A
  • single EPSPs may be too small to depolarise the membrane to threshold
  • so EPSPs can combine (summate) to achieve a threshold depolarisation
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5
Q

What are 2 ways EPSPs summate?

A
  • TEMPORAL SUMMATION
    multiple EPSPs in rapid succession from a single synapse
  • SPATIAL SUMMATION
    simultaneous multiple EPSPs from different synapses
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6
Q

Give a summary on neuronal physiology

A

Resting membrane potential:
- the transmembrane potential of the resting cell

Graded potential:
- temporary, localised change in the resting potential
- amplitude signal caused by a stimulus

Action potential:
- an electrical impulse and a frequency signal produced by a GP that exceeds a threshold
- propagates along the surface of an axon to the nerve terminal and synapse

Synaptic activity:
- releases neurotransmitters from the presynaptic membrane
- produces GPs in the postsynaptic membrane

Information processing:
- response (integration of stimuli) of the postsynaptic cell

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