Neurons and Neuroglia
Impulse and Synapse
CNS and Protection
Brain and Lobes
PNS and Reflexes
Special Senses
100

These cells conduct electrical impulses and make up only about 10% of nervous system tissue.

What are neurons?

100

The resting electrical state of a neuron when the inside is negative compared to the outside.

What is resting potential?

100

The two main structures of the central nervous system.

What are the brain and the spinal cord?

100

The largest part of the brain, divided into two hemispheres.

What is the cerebrum?

100

Sensory nerves are also known by this name.

What are afferent nerves?

100

These receptors detect light in the eye.

What are photoreceptors?

200

These support cells insulate, protect, and nourish neurons and make up about 90% of nervous system tissue.

What are neuroglia?

200

The rapid reversal of charge caused by sodium rushing into the neuron.

What is depolarization?
200

Name the meninges from superficial to deep.

What are dura mater, arachnoid membrane, and pia mater?

200

This lobe controls reasoning, planning, and decision-making.

What is the frontal lobe?

200

Motor nerves are also known by this name.

What are efferent nerves?

200

Name the two types of photoreceptors and their main functions.

What are rods (low-light vision) and cones (color vision)?

300

Name the three neuron types based on number of processes.

What are unipolar, bipolar, and multipolar neurons?

300

The space between two neurons where neurotransmitters are released.

What is the synaptic cleft?

300

This fluid cushions the brain and prevents it from contacting the skull.

What is cerebrospinal fluid?

300

This lobe processes sensory information such as touch and temperature.

What is the parietal lobe?

300

The involuntary division of the peripheral nervous system.

What is the autonomic nervous system?

300

This part of the retina provides the sharpest vision.

What is the fovea centralis?

400

This neuroglial cell wraps around axons in the peripheral nervous system to form the myelin sheath.

What are Schwann cells?

400

Neurotransmitters cross this structure to continue an impulse to the next neuron.

What is the synapse?

400

Cerebrospinal fluid is produced by these capillary clusters inside the ventricles.

What are choroid plexuses?

400

This lobe is responsible for visual processing.

What is the occipital lobe?

400

This division of the autonomic nervous system prepares the body for fight or flight.

What is the sympathetic division?

400

These three tiny bones amplify sound vibrations in the middle ear.

What are the ossicles?

500

These neuroglia circulate cerebrospinal fluid within the ventricles.

What are ependymal cells?

500

This principle states that an action potential either happens fully or not at all.

What is the all-or-none principle?

500

Cerebrospinal fluid is reabsorbed into the blood through these structures.

What are arachnoid granulations?

500

This brain structure coordinates movement and muscle memory.

What is the cerebellum?

500

List the five parts of a reflex arc in correct order.

What are receptor, sensory neuron, integration, motor neuron, and effector?

500

Smell and taste both rely on this type of sensory receptor.

What are chemoreceptors?

M
e
n
u