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Nervous, Sensory, and Motor systems

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
What are nerve cells specialized for carrying electrical signals from one part of the body to another?   Neurons  
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The nervous system is able to send messages much more quickly that what system?   Endocrine System  
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Does the nervous system depend on the circulatory system like hormones?   No  
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The nervous system of most complex animals have how many divisions?   Two  
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What are the two main divisions of the nervous system?   Central and Peripheral  
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Which nervous system consists of the brain and, invertebrates, the spinal cord?   Central Nervous system  
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Which nervous system is made up mostly of nerves that carry signals into and out of CNS?   Peripheral Nervous System  
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What is the name for bundled axons of many neurons, along with connective tissue and blood vessels?   A Nerve  
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What is a communication line made from cable-like bundles of neuron fibers along with other tissues?   A Nerve  
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The three interconnected functions of the nervous system are carried out by what?   Three types of nerons  
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What are the three types of neurons?   Sensory, Interneurons, and Motor  
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Which neuron carries out motor output?   Motor  
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Which neuron conveys sensory input?   Sensory  
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Which neuron performs integration, the interpretation of the sensory signals?   Interneuron  
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What performs that body's responses to motor output?   Effectors  
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Effectors are usually what muscles?   skeletal  
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neurons are functional units of what?   The Nervous System  
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What houses the nucleus, cytoplasm, and other organelles?   Cell body  
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What are the two types of extensions that project for the cell body?   Dendrites and Axon  
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What receives incoming messages from other cells and convey the info toward the cell body?   Dendrites  
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What conducts signals toward another neuron or an effector?   Axon  
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Supporting cells outnumber neurons by as many as how many?   50 to 1  
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whats protects, insulates, and reinforces the neurons?   supporting cells  
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A resting neuron contains potential energy that resides in an electrical charge difference across what?   its plasma membrane  
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What is the voltage (potential difference) called?   Resting potential  
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A neuron in its resting state is positive or negatively charged within the cell?   negatively  
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While a neuron is in its resting state what are allowed to diffuse out?   positively charged potassium ions  
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What is any factor that causes a nerve signal to be generated?   Stimulus  
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What is the technical name for nerve signal?   Action potential  
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What are changes in the electrical polarity in a neuron due to an influx of positive Na+ ions?   Action Potential  
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What is a local electrical event?   Action Potential  
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To function as a nerve signal, this local event must be passed along what?   The neuron  
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What is like a domino effect along the neuron?   Action Potential Propagation  
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Action potentials are all or none events which means they are the same no matter how strong or weak what triggers them?   The stimulus triggers them  
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What does a strong stimulus do to action potentials?   generate more at a greater frequency  
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The action potential will be propagated down the axon to what?   synaptic terminal  
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What is the name of the end of the axon?   synaptic terminal  
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What is responsible for transmitting this signal to the receiving cell?   synaptic terminal  
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What are relay points between two neurons or between a neuron and an effector cell?   Chemical synapses  
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Chemical synapses have a narrow gap called what?   synaptic cleft  
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What separates a synaptic terminal of the sending neuron from the receiving cell?   synaptic cleft  
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Chemical synapses rely on what to carry info from one nerve cell to another kind of cell that will react?   neurotransmitters  
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What interprets the chemical synapses with the complex info?   cell bodies  
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A neuron may receive input from hundreds of other neurons via thousands of what?   synaptic terminals  
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A wide variety of small molecules can act as what?   Neutotransmitters  
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What can act as synapses by increasing or decreasing the normal effect of neurotransmitters?   Drugs  
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What is the name of the concentration of the nervous system at the head?   Cephalization  
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What is the name of the presence of a central nervous system distinct from a peripheral nervous system?   Centralization  
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In all vertebrates the brain and spinal cord make up what nervous system?   Central Nervous System (CNS)  
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What acts as the central communication conduit between the brain and the rest of the body?   The spinal cord  
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What is the master control center of the nervous system?   The brain  
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What contains the densest concentration of neurons in our body?   The brain and spinal cord  
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What is the name of the fluid that the brain and spinal cord's spaces are filled with and protects and nourishes the cells of the central nervous system   Cerebrospinal  
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What is the name for the connective tissue layers that also protect the brain and spinal cord?   Meninges  
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In the central nervous system which matter is mainly axons of the neurons?   White matter  
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In the central nervous system which matter is mainly cell bodies and dendrites of the neurons?   Gray matter  
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The brain is divided into how many regions?   Three  
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What are the three regions of the brain?   The forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain  
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The brain stem is made up of how many sections?   two  
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What are the two sections of the brain stem?   Hindbrain and midbrain  
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Which regions of the brain serve as a sensory filter, selecting which info reaches higher brain centers?   Hindbrain and Midbrain  
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What part of the hindbrain that is the planning center for body movements?   Cerebellum  
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What is a structure of the hindbrain which is responsible for the control of the Respiratory system?   The Pons  
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What is responsible for controlling many of the involuntary activities associated with eating?   medulla oblongata  
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Which part of the brain contains the most sophisticated integrating centers in the brain like the thalamus and hypothalamus?   Forebrain  
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What contains most of the cell bodies that relay info to the cerebrum and is found in the forebrain?   Thalamus  
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What controls many regulatory functions and is found in the forebrain?   Hypothalamus  
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What is the largest and most sophisticated part of our brain?   Cerebrum  
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What consists of right and left cerebral hemispheres?   Cerebrum  
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What is a highly folded layer of gray matter forming the surface of the cerebrum?   cerebral cortex  
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What helps produce our most distinctive human traits, when it comes to problem solving and complex thought?   Cerebral Cortex  
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What is the site of the most complex mental processing?   Cerebral Cortex  
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The right and left cerebral hemispheres are specialized for what?   different mental tasks  
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Each cerebral hemisphere has how many lobes?   four  
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In lateralization, areas in the two hemispheres become specialized for what?   Different Functions  
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In 1848 a railroad accident with a 3 foot long spike through the head happened to a man named what?   Phineas Gage  
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What did scientists study and find on the preserved skull?   The frontal lobe links personality  
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