Information Processing Flashcards
What do inhibitory neurones do?
Release neurotransmitters that HYPERPOLARISE the nerve cell membrane
What do excitatory neurones do?
Release neurotransmitters that DEPOLARISE the nerve cell membrane
What is the activity of a nerve determined by?
balance of inhibitory and excitatory input
What is a disadvantage of EPSPs (excitatory post synaptic potentials) and how is this overcome?
- single EPSPs may be too small to depolarise the membrane to threshold
- so EPSPs can combine (summate) to achieve a threshold depolarisation
What are 2 ways EPSPs summate?
- TEMPORAL SUMMATION
multiple EPSPs in rapid succession from a single synapse - SPATIAL SUMMATION
simultaneous multiple EPSPs from different synapses
Give a summary on neuronal physiology
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