The Brain
Nerves + Neurons
The Eyes
The Ears
Scent and Taste
100

The three general regions of the brain; list from least complex to most complex.

What is the brain stem, the cerebellum, and the cerebrum?

100

Name the three classifications of neurons.

What are unipolar, bipolar, and multipolar?

100

Name all the cranial nerves associated with the eye (number or name is fine).

What is cranial nerve II (optic), cranial nerve III (oculomotor), cranial nerve IV (trochlear), and cranial nerve VI (abducens)?

100

Name the cranial nerve associated with the ears.

What is cranial nerve VIII (vestibulcochlear)?

100

Name the four tastes.

What are bitter, sweet, sour, and umami?

200

Region of the brain that many special sense pathways pass through at some point.

What is the thalamus?

200

The fatty layer of cells that cover a neuron's axon.

What is the myelin sheath?

200

Name the three tunics of the eye; identify the one that processes light.

What are the fibrous tunic (sclera), vascular tunic (choroid), and sensory tunic (retina) (retina processes light)?

200

Name the spiral-shaped organ located inside the innermost ear.

What is the cochlea?

200

This ion sometimes triggers a salty taste when entering Type I support cells in taste buds.

What is Na+?

300

This important component of the brain connects the two hemispheres: state its name and its importance in brain function.

What is the corpus callosum; what is allowing the two brain hemispheres to cross over (aids in writing, reading, vision, language processing, hand-eye coordination, etc. Accept any answer close to these)

300

Name the three layers of a nerve.

What is the epineurium, the perineurium, and the endoneurium?

300

Name the two humors of the eye; identify their locations in the eye (relative to other eye structures).

What is the aqueous humor (by the lens and the cornea) and the vitreous humor (main chamber of the eye, surrounded by retina)?

300

This is the special fluid located inside the vestibular canals (hint: it is saltier than blood or other interstitial fluids).

What is endolymph?

300

This is the only special sense that doesn't pass through the thalamus.

What is olfaction/sense of smell?

400

Name the three parts of the brainstem and their functions.

What is the midbrain (visual and audio processing as well as ocular motion), pons (sleep cycle), and medulla oblongata (vital homeostatic functions like heart rate, vomiting, crying, and innate "drives" like hunger and thirst)?

400

Identify the difference between a ramus and a root.

Rami have mixed (afferent and efferent) signals, whereas roots have only one type of signal (either afferent or efferent, but never both!)

400

Name the part of the eye that is affected by the development of cataracts. (Bonus points if you can tell me WHY they develop)

What is the lens?

400

Name the three bones/ossicles of the ear; state what their purpose is.

What are the malleus, incus, and stapes (they transmit vibrations from the outer ear to the inner ear)?

400

This type of channel protein is located on taste buds for sweet, umami, and bitter sensations.

What is a GCPR (G protein-coupled receptor)?

500

Name the lobes of the brain; for bonus points, state a potential symptom of damage to each lobe.

What are the frontal, parietal, occipital, and temporal lobes? 


*For bonus points: what is hearing loss, blindness, personality change, and numbness?*

500

Name the region of the spinal cord that a sensory impulse would travel to.

What is the dorsal root?

500

Identify the region of the optic nerves in which the left and right optic nerves cross over.

What is the optic chiasma?

500

Name the mineral structures attached to some membrane surfaces that are closely associated with hair cells.

What are otoliths?

500

Compare the olfactory capabilities of humans to other animals; relatively, how good is our sense of smell?

Very poor