Reflex Arc
Action Potential
Brain
Functions of Nervous System
Other
100

This type of neuron takes sensory information and activates effectors to elicit a response to a stimulus

Motor/efferent neurons

100

the minimum potential needed for an action potential to happen (causes the sodium channels to open)

What is Threshold Potential

100

What are the 4 lobes in the brain?

What is the frontal, parietal, occipital, and temporal lobe?

100

What are the three main functions of the nervous system?

What is sensory, integration, and motor output?

100

disorder characterized by multiple seizures 

What is Epilepsy?

200

This part of reflex arc detects the stimulus ex. pain, touch, temperature.

Receptor

200

inside of the neuron is more negatively charged than the outside

What is Polarized?

200

Name the 3 layers of the meninges

What is the dura mater, arachnoid space, and pia mater?
200

nicknamed "rest and digest," helps body return to homeostasis

What is the parasympathetic nervous system
200

symptoms include muscle rigidity, tremors, changes in speech and gait

what is parkinson’s?

300

This type of neuron brings information to the central nervous system

What are afferent neurons?

300

If depolarization reaches a threshold, an action potential (impulse) is conducted
Each action potential (impulse) is conducted at maximum strength unless there are toxic materials within the cell or the membrane has been disrupted

What is the All Or None Principle?

300

What organs make up the central nervous system?

What is the brain and spinal cord?

300

made of medulla oblongata, pons and midbrain; controls breathing, regulate cardiovascular system, controls sleep/wake cycle

What is the brain stem?

300

also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, involves death of motor neurons

What is ALS?

400

Smooth, skeletal, or cardiac muscle or glands that create a response to a stimulus.

What are effectors?

400

stimulus signals sodium channels to open and sodium ions move into the neuron changing the membrane potential (membrane potential jumps to around +40 mV)

What is Depolarization

400

Whitish nervous tissue of the CNS consisting of neurons and their myelin sheaths.

What is white matter?

400

Large, cauliflower-like structure found inferior to the occipital lobe of the cerebrum. It provides the precise timing for coordinating skeletal muscle activity and controls balance and equilibrium. It also stores memories of previous movements.

What is the cerebellum

400

Autoimmune disease that attacks the myelin sheath

What is multiple sclerosis?

500

Point of contact between the axon terminal of one neuron and the dendrite of the receiving neuron. Area where one neuron communicates with one another.

What is the synapse?

500

Period where no impulse can travel along the neuron due to sodium and potassium channels “restarting” or returning to their resting state

What is the Refractory Period?

500

Brain and spinal cord tissue that consists of nuclei and lacks myelinated axons

What is Grey Matter?

500
Composed of the thalamus and hypothalamus 

What is the diencephalon?

500

neurons degenerate until they can no longer send an impulse. Characterized by memory loss

What is alzheimer’s?

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