Neurons
neurotransmitters
nervous system
Cerebral cortex
Brain Stem
100

What is the cell body?

the part of a neuron (nerve cell) that contains the nucleus and most organelles.

100

Acetylcholine

 important for muscle control, autonomic body functions, and in learning, memory, and attention.  

100

Central nervous system


The central nervous system is made up of the brain and spinal cord: The brain controls how we think, learn, move, and feel. The spinal cord carries messages back and forth between the brain and the nerves that run throughout the body.



100

Frontal Lobe

The frontal lobes are considered our behaviour and emotional control centre and home to our personality.

100

Medulla

Your medulla oblongata is the bottom-most part of your brain. Its location means it's where your brain and spinal cord connect, making it a key conduit for nerve signals to and from your body. It also helps control vital processes like your heartbeat, breathing and blood pressure.

200

What is an Axon?

the long, thin, hollow, cylindrical extension of a neuron that normally carries a nerve impulse away from the cell body

200

Dopamine

Dopamine is responsible for allowing you to feel pleasure, satisfaction and motivation.

200

Peripheral nervous system

Peripheral nerves reside outside your brain and spinal cord. They relay information between your brain and the rest of your body. The peripheral nervous system is divided into two main parts

200

parietal lobe

the parietal lobe processes sensory information it receives from the outside world, mainly relating to touch, taste, and temperature.  

200

Pons

Your pons is a part of your brainstem, a structure that links your brain to your spinal cord. It handles unconscious processes and jobs, such as your sleep-wake cycle and breathing.

300

What are dendrites?

a branching, threadlike extension of the cell body that increases the receptive surface of a neuron and  receive communications from other cells.

300

Serotonin

regulates your mood.

300

somatic nervous system

The somatic nervous system is a component of the peripheral nervous system associated with the voluntary control of the body movements via the use of skeletal muscles.  

300

occipital lobe

The occipital lobes sit at the back of the head and are responsible for visual perception, including colour, form and motion.

300

reticular formation

the reticular formation is a network of neurons extending throughout the brainstem with a job to regulate alertness, sleep, and wakefulness.

400

What is action potential?

a temporary shift (from negative to positive) in the neuron's membrane potential caused by ions suddenly flowing in and out of the neuron which terminates in the release of chemical signals in the form of neurotransmitters.

400

Endorphins

helps relieve pain, reduce stress and improve mood.

400

Automatic nervous system

The autonomic nervous system is a component of the peripheral nervous system that regulates involuntary physiologic processes including heart rate, blood pressure, respiration, digestion, and sexual arousal

400

Temporal Lobe

They are most commonly associated with processing auditory information and with the encoding of memory.

400

thalamus

Your thalamus is your body's information relay station. All information from your body's senses (except smell) must be processed through your thalamus before being sent to your brain's cerebral cortex for interpretation. Your thalamus also plays a role in sleep, wakefulness, consciousness, learning and memory.

500

What is the Threshold?



The level that a depolarization must reach for an action potential to occur.

500

GABA/Glutamate

Regulates sleep-wake cycles/learning and long term memory

500

Sympathetic/parasympathetic nervous systems

The part of the nervous system that increases heart rate, blood pressure, breathing rate, and pupil size. It also causes blood vessels to narrow and decreases digestive juices./Your parasympathetic nervous system is a network of nerves that relaxes your body after periods of stress or danger. It also helps run life-sustaining processes, like digestion, during times when you feel safe and relaxed.

500

Motor/Sensory cortex

The primary function of the motor cortex is to generate signals to direct the movement of the body. It is part of the frontal lobe/Its primary function is to detect sensory information from the body regarding temperature, proprioception, touch, texture, and pain.. located in parietal lobe

500

Cerebellum

 the Cerebellum initiates and coordinates movement and regulates temperature.