Cranial Nerves
Brain Structures
Spinal Cord
Reflexes
Memory and Learning
100

What is function of the Accessory Nerve? (XI) 

controls head and neck muscles (motor) 

100

Define Precentral Cortex vs Postcentral Cortex 

Primary Motor cortex vs Primary Sensory (somatosensory) cortex 

100

What is housed in the subarachnoid space? 

cerebral spinal fluid 

100

What are the two types of reflexes we went over?

Polysynaptic and Monosynaptic 

100

Where does consolidation happen 

Temporal Lobe 

200

What nerve would cause death if it was severed?

Vagus Nerve (NX) 

200

What are the 2 regions of the mesencephalon

Cerebral Peduncles and Corpora Quadrigemina 

200

Name the 4 Nerve Plexi and name one nerve from each 

Cervical ( Phrenic nerve ), Brachial ( Radial nerve ), Lumbar ( Femoral nerve ), Sacral ( Sciatic nerve )

200

What are somatic vs autonomic reflexes? 

Somatic - Activation of skeletal muscles 

Autonomic - Activation of smooth muscle, cardiac muscle and glands

200

Term for converting short term memory to long term memory 

Consolidation 

300

Andie is experiencing sudden dizziness and hearing loss what crainal nerve is causing this problem?

Vestibulochoclear (NVIII)

300

What is located in the diencephalon, acts as a major relay station for sensory information

Thalamus 

300

There are many notable features of the spinal cord, What is the cauda equina?

Extensions of fine branches of white matter 

300
What two reflexes are used to prevent injury? 

Cross extensor and Withdrawl reflex 

300

What type of learner would would remember the bones and muscles in lab by creating a dance? 

Kinestetic Learner 

400

There are 3 cranial nerves that control eye movement, Name all of them and briefly state how their functions differ

Oculomotor (N III): Moves most eye muscles, lifts eyelid, constricts pupil

Trochlear (N IV): Moves superior oblique muscle (down and lateral)

Abducens (N VI): Moves eyes lateraly; lateral rectus muscle (outward)

400

The brainstem is composed mostly of _________, except for a special set of unorganized gray matter called _________. 

White, Reticular Formation 


400

Extensions of Pia matter are called _________. 

What do they prevent? 

Denticulate ligaments - lateral movement 

400

Explain Ascending tract vs Descending tract 

Ascending: carry sensory (afferent) information up from the body to the brain

Descending: carry motor (efferent) commands down from the brain to the body

400

A student took a VARK test and found they are a auditiory leaner. Provide a test strategy for them

They could record lectures and play them back to study 

500

Name the 4 crainal nerves that go through the superior orbital fissure 

Ocularmotor, Trochlear, Abducens, Trigeminal* 

500

How are the lateral ventricles connected to the third ventricle, and how is the third ventricle connected to the fourth ventricle?

interventricular foramen and cerebral aqueduct.

500

The common peroneal nerve and tibial nerve innverate what muscles

The calf muscles and other posterior leg structures

500

Walk through the steps of a polysynaptic reflex arc  

Stimulus - Receptor - Afferent neuron- Synapse- interneuron - Efferent neuron-Effector 

500

Why does long-term potentiation have to happen during deep sleep?

This is because formation of glial cells and consolidation of memories requires a large amount of ATP to build glial cells

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