Neuron Classification
Central Nervous System
Peripheral Nervous System
Brain Structure
Arteries
100

Projections that branch off the cell body and transmit nerve impulse toward the cell body.

What is a dendrite?

100

Lobe in the brain responsible for executive function.

What is the frontal lobe?

100

This nervous system controls voluntary movements of skeletal muscles.

What is the somatic nervous system?

100

Section of the brain that controls higher functioning such as cognition, language, and memory.

What is the cerebrum?

100

This artery’s main function is to supply the brainstem and cerebellum.

What is the vertebral artery?

200

These types of neurons convey impulses from the central or peripheral nervous system to muscles and glands.

What is a motor neuron?

200

The motor cortex is a part of this gyrus.

What is the precentral gyrus? 

200

This nervous system controls involuntary functions like heart rate.

What is the autonomic nervous system?

200

All pathways to and from the cerebrum pass through this structure.

What is the brainstem?

200

This artery supplies blood to the medial surfaces of the frontal and parietal lobes.

What is the anterior cerebral artery (ACA)?

300

These types of neurons convey impulses from receptors in the muscles, skin, and glands to the nervous system

What is a sensory neuron?

300

The cortex where sensory information is processed.

What is the primary somatosensory cortex?

300

Fight-or-Flight responses are a part of this nervous system.

What is the sympathetic nervous system?

300

This structure connects the left and right hemispheres, allowing communication between them.

What is the corpus callosum?

300

This circulatory structure at the base of the brain provides the capability to compensate for loss of blood flow from one of the main blood supplies to the brain.

What is the circle of Willis?

400

These have multiple dendrites and a single axon. Most neurons in the CNS are this.

What is a multipolar neuron?

400

Vision crosses over to become contralateral at this structure.

What is optic chiasm?

400

Rest and digest responses are a part of this nervous system.

What is the parasympathetic nervous system?

400

This structural feature of the cerebral cortex increases surface area and separates brain regions.

What are cortical sulci?

400

The main artery of importance to speech-language pathologists and audiologists because it supplies blood to much of the lateral surfaces of the cerebral hemispheres.

What is the middle cerebellar artery (MCA)?

500

These have long axons that extend to the PNS and synapse with nerves that innervate muscles or glands. Typically myelinated.

What is Golgi Type 1 (projection neurons)?

500

This cell receptor processes pain. 

What is a nociceptor?

500

These three types of nerves make up the PNS.

What are spinal nerves, cranial nerves, and visceral nerves?

500

This imaging technique measures brain waves through electrodes attached to the scalp to assess brain activity in conditions like epilepsy and sleep disorders.

What is EEG (electroencephalography)?

500

Name one of the key arteries that branch off from the basilar artery to supply the cerebellum.

What are the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) or superior cerebellar artery?