PNS
Nerves
General Senses
Special Senses
ANS
100

This term describes bundles of axons in the PNS that carry sensory or motor information.

nerves

100

This nerve, the longest cranial nerve, is responsible for vision.

What is the optic nerve (CN II)?

100

These receptors, located in the dermis and subcutaneous layers, are responsible for detecting changes in temperature.

What are thermoreceptors?

100

These receptors are used for taste and smell.

What are chemoreceptors?

100

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

What is the sympathetic division?

200

This division of the PNS sends signals to voluntary skeletal muscle.

What is the somatic division?

200

This cranial nerve is responsible for parasympathetic control of the heart, lungs, and digestive tract.

What is the vagus nerve (CN X)?

200

These free nerve endings are responsible for detecting pain.

What are nociceptors?

200

This structure in the inner ear detects rotational movements of the head.

What are the semicircular canals?

200

Parasympathetic preganglionic neurons are primarily located in these two regions of the central nervous system.

What are the brainstem and sacral spinal cord?

300

These neurons, located in the spinal cord and brainstem, directly innervate skeletal muscles.

What are lower motor neurons?

300

This nerve exits the spinal cord between the 1st and 2nd thoracic vertebrae.

What is T1?

300

This lobe of the cerebrum gives conscious awareness of sensory information from the skin.

What is the parietal lobe?

300

These hair cells in the cochlea detect sound vibrations and transmit auditory signals to the brain.

What are mechanoreceptors?

300

This neurotransmitter is released by all preganglionic neurons in both divisions of the ANS.

What is acetylcholine (ACh)?

400

The spinothalamic tract carries this type of information.

What are pain and temperature?
400

This group of spinal nerves innervates the diaphragm, making breathing possible.

What are the phrenic nerves?

400

Pain from internal organs that is perceived as originating from the skin or another superficial area is called this.

What is referred pain?

400

This specialized layer of tissue in the eye contains the photoreceptor cells and is responsible for converting light into neural signals.

What is the retina?

400

Sympathetic preganglionic neurons originate in this region of the spinal cord.

What are the thoracic and lumbar regions?

500

These sensory receptors in muscles and tendons that detect changes in stretch or tension and initiate reflexes.

What are proprioceptors?

500

These nerves do not form a plexus and directly innervate the intercostal muscles and skin of the chest wall.

What are the thoracic spinal nerves?

500

These receptors in the skin detect light touch and are abundant in fingertips and lips.

What are Meissner's corpuscles?

500

This membrane in the cochlea vibrates in response to sound waves and is lined with hair cells.

What is the basilar membrane?

500

Which ganglia are used by the parasympathetic division?

What are terminal or intramural ganglia?

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