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Nelson Bio Chapter 9.  The brain operates on the amount of electrical power that would light a 10 watt bulb  Your brain weighs 1/50 of your adult weight.

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Presentation on theme: "Nelson Bio Chapter 9.  The brain operates on the amount of electrical power that would light a 10 watt bulb  Your brain weighs 1/50 of your adult weight."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nelson Bio Chapter 9

2  The brain operates on the amount of electrical power that would light a 10 watt bulb  Your brain weighs 1/50 of your adult weight and uses 25% of the oxygen you take in  A nerve cell can send 1000 impulses a second  Neurons are the largest cells in the body – some are up to 3 feet long.  There are more nerve cells in the human brain than there are stars in the Milky Way

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7  Nervous system contains 2 types of cells:  Glial cells – non conducting cells which provide structural support  Neurons – the nerve cell itself  1) sensory(afferent) – sense & relay info(stimulus) to the CNS  2) interneurons – link neurons within the body  3) motor neurons (efferent) – relay info to the effectors

8  Glands or muscles that cause things to happen.  So why are they called effectors?

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10  1) cell body – contains the nucleus and cell organelles; normal cell processes happen here  2) dendrites – short, highly branched fibers specialized for receiving impulses (stimuli)  3) axon – a long thin fiber(extension of the cytoplasm) which carries impulses away from the cell body to the effectors

11  More than 100 axons could be placed inside the shaft of a single human hair  Nerves are made of many neurons held together

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14  The synapse is the junction between the terminal branches of a neuron and another cell.  Impulses are transmitted across this gap  An axon may synapse with 1000 other neurons

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17  Nerve gas, botulism, some insecticides  Drugs  Stimulants –produce a feeling of well being, alertness and excitement –amphetimines bind to certain recept0rs so mimic norepinephrine, caffeine  Depressants – slow down body activites – barbituates block the formation of norepinephrine

18  A nerve impulse is both an electrical and a chemical event  A nerve at rest has a relative negative charge inside and a positive charge outside  K ions are concentrated inside the neuron and Na ions are concentrated outside the neuron

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20  This neg. charge is maintained by sodium- potassium pumps which control the movement of Na and K ions through the cell membrane. (ATP supplies the energy to fuel the pumps).  The membrane is now said to be polarized  An external stimulus changes the ability of the membrane to keep out the Na ions & they rush in

21  This rapid inflow of Na causes a charge reversal – depolarization  This change in charge stimulates adjacent points in the nerve cell & a wave of impulse passes along the nerve cell  Animation Animation  An impulse ends when K ions rush to the outside and repolarize the membrane

22  A nerve impulse can travel at the rate of 100m/sec  The recovery period is called the refractory period.  Saltatory conduction is when the impulse jumps from one node of Ranvier to the next – so this is faster in myelinated neurons

23  The impulse causes chemicals called neurotransmitters to be release from the vesicles in the synaptic knobs  The chemicals travel across the synaptic gap and cause an impulse to be started along the postsynaptic membrane  Animation Animation

24  A stimulus must be above a certain level to produce a response  The all or none response- neurons either fire or not at all ( like a trigger of a gun)  What causes a greater intensity of response?  it is not stronger stimuli, but more impulses.

25  On pg. 426 – do questions 4,5,7,8,9 and 13.

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