The brain structure in charge of hearing.
What is the temporal lobe?
The body system that coordinates everything you do.
What is the body system?
The bumps on the tongue that sense taste.
What are the papillae?
The system of numbers that computers can understand.
What is binary?
The best university in the world. (Especially better than USC)
What is UCLA?
The part of the brain that controls complex thought, imagination and smell.
What is the frontal lobe?
Structures in your body which are too small to be seen but play an important job in keeping our body working.
What are cells?
The structure in the back of your eye that senses light and color.
What is the retina?
A method a computer uses to change binary into letters.
What is ASCII
An educated guess based on research.
What is a hypothesis?
The part of the brain that processes sight.
What is the occipital lobe?
The cell whose job is to carry messages throughout the body.
What is a nerve cell or neuron?
The first layer of skin made of mostly dead cells.
What is the epidermis?
Temporary memory a computer uses to function.
What is RAM?
Information gathered from observations and measurements.
What is data?
The brain structure that control involuntary actions such as breathing and your heart beat.
What is the brain stem?
A part of the body that is made up of a long bundle of nerves and acts like a highway for messages to and from the brain.
What is the spinal cord?
A fancy word that refers to the structure that senses smell.
What is the Olfactory Epithelium?
The part of the computer that processes all the information.
What is the CPU?
The temperature where water begins to change from a solid to a liquid?
What is the melting point?
The part of the brain that processes touch and taste.
What is the parietal lobe?
The two parts of the nervous system.
What are the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system?
The three little bones that connect the eardrum to the cochlea.
What are the ossicles?
The type of encoding we used to send pictures.
What is run length encoding?
A circuit whose elements only have one path.