What does thermoregulation refer to?
What is, the regulation of internal temperatures.
What is the environmental change called?
What is, the stimulus.
This type of Homeostasis has to do with temperature.
What is, thermoregulation.
What does Homeostasis mean?
What is, similar balance.
Blood-Glucose in simple terms.
In thermoregulation, what is the stimulus if you are sweating?
What is, heat.
What detects the environmental change?
What is, the receptor.
This type of Homeostasis is disrupted if you have diabetes.
What is, Blood-Glucose levels.
Define positive feedback.
What is, when the effector works with the stimulus and amplifies it.
Diabetes disrupts what part of the Blood-Glucose homeostasis.
What is, insulin.
In thermoregulation, what is the stimulus if you are shivering?
What is, cold.
What part of the body decides what to do with the information that there is an environmental change?
What is, the brain?
This type of homeostasis is an example used for positive-feedback.
What is, child birth or blood clotting.
Define negative feedback.
What is, when the effector does the opposite of the stimulus.
If glucose is too high, what is used to lower it?
What is, insulin.
Thermoregulation is what kind of feedback?
What is, negative feedback.
After the body decides what to do with the change of the environment, where does it go?
What is, the effector.
Thermoregulation, osmoregulation, chemical regulation are all types of what?
What is, Homeostasis.
Define Receptor.
Blood-Glucose homeostasis is part of what type of system.
a) Nervous System
b) Endocrine System
c) Skeletal System
What is, b.
What is the effector if you are sweating?
What are, sweat glands.
This part of the body is how information is sent throughout it.
What is, the nervous system or endocrine system.
True or False, blood pressure is regulated by homeostasis?
What is, true.
There is always a ________.
What is, stimulus.
If Fred does not have this specific body part, he could not regulate his blood-glucose levels.
What is, the pancreas.