Action Potential
Neurons and Synapses
Directionality and more
Other
100

What is the resting membrane potential?

-65mv

100

Point of contact made between an axon terminal and the post synaptic site

synapse

100

Explain the difference between efferent and afferent?

Efferent- motor information travels from the brain

Afferent- sensory information travels to the brain

100

Glial cells that make myelin in the PNS

Schwann Cells

200

Describe Transduction and give an Example

Change of one Form of energy to another form of energy


200

Describe the Axon terminal

Also called Boutons or Presynaptic endings: Located at the end of the axon, contains synaptic vesicles of neurotransmitters that release into the synapse

200

What direction is the coronal, sagittal, and transverse (axial) plane

coronal- through the top of the head

sagittal- split the body down the middle (left and right)

transverse- split in half (top and bottom)

200

What is the Myelin Sheath

A white fatty insulating layer that aids in the propagation of neural signals along myelinated axons

300

What is over shoot?

Part of action potential where inside of neuron is more positively charged than outside

300

What is retrograde transport?

movement from terminal → soma

300

What is the difference between association and commissural fibers

Association- intrahemispheric; connect different parts of the same hemisphere

Commissural- interhemispheric; horizontal fibers that connect gray matter of two hemispheres

300

What are the gaps between myelin segments?

Nodes of Ranvier

400

What are the 6 phases of an Action Potential?

1. Resting Phase

2. Rising Phase

3. The overshoot Phase

4. The falling phase

5. The undershoot phase

6. The recovery Phase

400

Describe the Axon Hillock

End of nucleus, beginning of axon, action potential is generated; spike initiation zone

400

What is scientific reductionism?

Approach to tackle complex systems breaking them down into micro and macro structures

400

What are oligodendrocytes? (CNS)

Myelin Producing cells: primarily in white matter

500

Describe action potential and what type of response is it?

The transposition of charge making the inside of the neuron briefly positive that is an all or nothing response

500

What are the 4 tenets of the neuron doctrine?

--The neuron is the structural & functional unit of nervous system

-- neurons are not genetically or anatomically continuous

-- neurons consist of a soma, axon, and dendrites

-- conduction happens in direction of dendrites → soma → axon

500

What is the difference between IPSPs and EPSPs?

An IPSP makes a neuron less likely to fire an action potential 

An EPSP makes a neuron more likely to fire an action potential

500

Who is Cajal and what did he do?

He was a histologist and artist and created Golgi-Stained Neurons. Identified that neurons are distinct not continuous