Resting potential, action potential, and signaling Flashcards
What is the approximate value of the ‘resting potential’?
[ ~-70 mV]
What is the approximate amplitude, duration of an action potential?
[100 mV, 1 msec]
What is an EPSP?
[excitatory post-synaptic potential; the neurotransmitter/receptor has caused a depolarization of the post-synaptic membrane]
What is an IPSP?
[inhibitory post-synaptic potential; the neurotransmitter/receptor has caused a hyper-polarization of the post-synaptic membrane]
What kinds of sensors are there?
[chemoreceptors, mechanical receptors, light receptors]
what is transduction?
[in nervous system, conversion of some form of energy (activated sensor) into electrical energy, as a local (receptor) potential]
Identify the differences between a local potential and an action potential?
[local potentials are graded (amplitude varies, dissipate in time and space across the membrane, and can be depolarizing or hyperpolarizing. Action potentials are all-or-none and move down the axon without decrement. A bunch of excitatory local potentials can add up to depolarize the soma enough so that it reaches threshold and creates an action potential]
what is a processor?
[a neuron in a network that is past initial sensation, that integrates properties with other sensory inputs and other neurons that may be further away or closer to the sensory input]
what is a receptive field?
[a description of the conditions under which a given neuron produces an action potential, aka, ‘spike’. It is usually fixed, but can be dynamic, and is the consequence of integrating its inputs. Often tied to a restricted region of a sensory surface (e.g., a patch of skin) that reflects the regions sampled by its inputs]
What is an effector?
[Usually, a lower motor neuron, i.e., a neuron whose axon innervates muscle]
What is a lower motor neuron?
[a neuron whose axon innervates muscle]
What is an upper motor neuron?
[a neuron that controls the lower motor neurons; e.g., corticospinal neurons exert control over lower motor neurons of the ventral horn of spinal cord]
What is behind the idea of a labelled line?
[That the activation of a particular neuron gives rise to a particular perception]
What is a reflex?
[a simple behavior characterized by its stereotypy. It is usually triggered by a sensory input that drives a simple motor output, e.g., the knee jerk reflex is tripped by stretch of muscle spindle receptors wired to the primary afferent which then monosynaptically activates lower motor neurons innervating that muscle. In real life, reflexes function as autonomous pieces of behavior that are chained into adaptive bigger pieces of behavior, much like a single software routine in a much bigger computer program. Spinal reflexes require no upper motor neurons; they are autonomous at that level of the spinal cord]
Why does the brain need so many processors?
[External stimuli are complex, making pattern recognition challenging (ask anyone involved in artificial intelligence). The Halle Barry cell was extracting invariant shapes specifying faces, and then that face. Just faces alone is difficult, because there’s probably a million variations impinging on the retina that are ‘faces’ and hundreds of millions that are not. This takes a significant amount of circuitry to solve]