Spinal Cord and Spinal nerves
Round 1
Spinal Cord and Spinal nerves
Round 2
Brain and cranial nerves
Round 1
Brain and cranial nerves
Round 2
Neural tissue, pathways.
Round 1
Neural tissue, pathways.
Round 2
Autonomic and Special senses.
Round 1
100

The dorsal surface of the spinal cord bears this shallow longitudinal groove

Posterior Median Sulcus

100

Tracts that carry sensory information to the brain

Ascending tracts

100

This thin, medial partition separates the pair of lateral ventricles

Septum Pellucidum

100

Supporting cells of the neural tissue

Neuroglial or glial cells

100

These neurons may be situated between sensory and motor neurons

Interneuron or association neurons

100

Short preganglionic fibers are characteristic of this division

Sympathetic

100

Name the two major subdivisions of the ANS

Sympathetic and parasympathetic

200

The segment of the spinal cord containing the cell bodies of sensory neurons

Dorsal Root ganglion

200

A deep crease along the ventral surface of the spinal cord

Anterior median fissure

200

Fluid-filled cavities within the brain


Ventricles

200

This neural division of the PNS begins at receptors, carrying sensory information to the CNS

Afferent division

200

Name three functions of astrocytes

Maintaining the blood-brain barrier, creating a three-dimensional framework for the CNS, performing repairs in damaged neural tissue, guiding neuron development, controlling the interstitial environment

200

Another name for the sympathetic division


Thoracolumbar division

200

Rods provides what kinds of vision

Cones provides what kind of vision

Black and white in dim light

Color vision in bright light

300

The lateral cord of the brachial plexus serves this nerve exclusively

Musculocutaneous nerve

300

This portion of the brain is responsible for monitoring proprioceptive (position) sensations, visual information from the eyes, and vestibular (balance) sensations from the inner ear as movements


Cerebellum

300

The sensory portion of this mixed nerve originates on the posterior one-third of the tongue

Glossopharyngeal nerve

300

Processing centers in this region coordinate complex sympathetic and parasympathetic reflexes

Medulla Oblongata

300

The most complex brain area, it has extensive connections with other cortical areas and with other portions of the brain, such as the limbic system.  It performs complicated learning and reasoning functions

Prefrontal cortex

300

Differences between exteroceptors, interoceptors, and proprioceptors

Sensitive to stimuli outside the body

Monitors conditions inside the body

Monitors body position

300

Which special sense has the most connection with the limbic system.

Olfaction

400

This horn contains the somatic and visceral sensory nuclei


Posterior gray horn

400

Name the three meningeal layers from superficial to deep

Dura mater, Arachnoid mater, Pia mater

400

This motor nerve’s primary function is eye movement, it originates in the mesencephalon, passes through the superior oblique fissure of the sphenoid, and innervates the superior oblique muscle

Trochlear nerve

400

The spread of information from one neuron to several neurons, or from one pool to multiple pools

Divergence 

400

Short postganglionic fibers are characteristic of this division

Parasympathetic

400

List 4 functions of the parasympathetic systems

List 4 functions of the sympathetic systems

Rest and digest, relaxation, food processing, energy absorption, constriction of pupils, sexual arousal, reduction in heart rate, contraction of urinary bladder.

Increased alertness, a feeling of energy and euphoria, increased heart rate and respiratory rate, and general elevation in muscle tone.


400

Five primary tastes

The sense of taste is served by what cranial nerves? 

Salty, bitter, sweet, sour and umami

Cranial nerves VII, IX, and X

500

Name the four major nerve plexuses

Name the five branches of the facial nerve

Cervical, brachial, lumbar, sacral

Temporal, Zygomatic, buccal, mandibular, cervical

500

Name the six major divisions of the adult brain

Cerebrum, mesencephalon, diencephalon, pons, cerebellum, medulla oblongata

500

The primary function of this cranial nerve is motor for tongue movement.  It originates on the medulla oblongata and passes through the occipital bone on its way to the muscles of the tongue


Hypoglossal nerve

500

Common, age-related anatomical changes in the nervous system include

A reduction in brain size and weight; reduction in the number of neurons; decrease in blood flow to the brain; changes in synaptic organization of the brain; intracellular and extracellular changes in CNS neurons

500

What receptors do they all respond to what stimuli

Chemoreceptors

Mechanoreceptors

Thermoreceptors

Photoreceptors

Nociceptors

Blood and chemicals in solution

Touch, pressure, stretch, and vibrations

Temperature

Light

Pain


500

The fibrous tunic consists of what two structures?

The vascular tunic consists of what three structures?

The neural tunic consists of what two structures

Sclera, cornea

Choroid, ciliary body, and iris

Retina and optic nerve

500

Components of the

External ear, middle ear, and inner ear.

External ear- Auricle or pinna, external acoustic meatus, tympanic membrane

Middle ear- Tympanic cavity, Auditory ossicles (Malleus, incus, stapes), pharyngotympanic (Auditory or Eustachian tube) 

Inner ear- Semicircular canals, cochlea, scala vestibuli, scala tympani, and cristae ampularis.