BIOS 1030 Week 11 Van Brocklyn
- Name the two main components of the nervous system. What is included in each of these components?
- The peripheral nervous system in divided into two divisions. What are these divisions?
- The autonomic division is also divided into two more divisions. What are these divisions?
- Draw a picture of a neuron. Label the axon terminals, axon, axon hillock, cell body, and dendrites.
- ______neurons sends inputs to the ______neurons, where then a ______neuron carries the output to the muscle and organs.
- Describe what happens at a sodium potassium pump.
- What is the resting membrane potential? What is it in a typical cell?
- Action potential:
- How does an action potential get started?
- How does the axon hillock help an action potential?
- Why is an action potential all or nothing?
- Why are axons insulated?
- What does it mean that a neuron has saltatory conduction?
- Define: nodes of Ranvier. Draw them on your picture in question #4.
- Myelin sheath are made by ______.
- What do you think would happen if a cell did not have any myelin sheath?
- What is neurotransmission? What is a synapse?
- Describe the steps of neurotransmission and how it changes membrane potential?
- Define: convergence and divergence.
BIOS 1030 Week 11 Colvin
- What is the difference between resting membrane potential, graded potentials, and an action potential?
- Describe what summation is.
- During an action potential, there is depolarization and repolarization. what happens to the ions during this process?
- Describe the all-or-none principle.
- What does it mean when they say an action potential is self-propagating?
- What encodes the strength of a stimulus?
- What controls the speed of action potentials?
- What are the function of neuroglial cells? What are the different types of neuroglial cells?
- What is a myelin sheath?
- ______form myelin sheath in CNS; ______forms myelin sheaths in PNS.
- Describe salutatory conduction.
- Name and describe some disorder that are associated with degeneration of myelin sheaths.
- What is synaptic transmission?
- Now, describe the process of synaptic transmission.
- What is the difference between excitatory and inhibitory NTs?