Nature/Nurture
Hormones
Neurons I
Neurons II
Neurotransmitters
100

Genetic characteristics that influence physical, behavioral, and mental traits and processes

Nature

100

Increases heart rate and blood flow

Adrenaline

100

A brief electrical charge that travels down a neuron

Action potential

100

“Excites” a neuron and causes it to fire

Agonist

100

Involved in muscle movement and memory

Acetylcholine

200

External environmental factors that one experiences

Nurture

200

_____ is the "hunger hormone while _____ is an appetite suppressant

Ghrelin; Leptin

200

Minimum electrical current required to fire an action potential

Threshold

200

Blocks or prevents a message from being passed along a neuron

Antigonist

200

Involved in attention and learning

Dopamine

300

Increased likelihood of developing a particular disease based on a person's genetic makeup

Genetic predisposition

300

Sleep aid

Melatonin

300

If a neuron fires, then it always fires at the same intensity

All-or-Nothing Principle

300

Gap between the axon terminal of one neuron and the dendrite of another

Synapse

300

Involved in mood regulation and arousal

Serotonin

400

The application of the evolutionary perspective in ways that discriminate against others

Eugenics

400

The "love" hormone

Oxytocin

400

After a neuron fires it pauses for a short period to recharge itself

Refractory period

400

Unused neurotransmitters in the synapse are reabsorbed into sending neurons

Reuptake

400

Involved in regulating stress and pain thresholds

GABA

500

Culturally modeled guide for how to act in various situations

Social script

500

The "master gland"

Pituitary gland

500

The _____ receives info

The _____ carries info

The _____ passes info on to the next neuron

Dendrites; Axon; Axon terminals

500

Multiple sclerosis and myasthenia gravis are both _____ disorders

Autoimmune

500

Involved in memory and cognition

Glutamate

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