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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Why do animals need a nervous system? Because the world is always coming at you! Take in information Regulation Remember… think about the bunny… Poor bunny!
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Nervous System Central nervous system CNS brain & spinal chord Peripheral nervous system nerves from senses Take in info from environment nerves to muscles Allow for response cerebrum cerebellum spinal cord cervical nerves thoracic nerves lumbar nerves femoral nerve sciatic nerve tibial nerve
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Nervous cells dendrites cell body axon synapse (space) Neuron a nerve cell signal direction ONE WAY signal direction nucleus terminal branches
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Fun facts about neurons Most specialized cell in animals Longest cell blue whale neuron 10-30 meters giraffe axon 5 meters human neuron 1-2 meters Nervous system allows for 1 millisecond response time
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 signal direction Myelin coating - lipid Axon coated with insulation made of myelin cells speeds signal signal hops from node to node 330 mph vs. 11 mph Multiple Sclerosis immune system (T cells) attacks myelin coating loss of signal Multiple Sclerosis immune system (T cells) attacks myelin coating loss of signal
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Synapse synapse Junction between nerve cells 1st cell releases chemical to trigger next cell – neurotransmitters proteins – remember 3-D shape?? where drugs affect nervous system Drugs – 1. block receptor sites on receiving neuron 2.Bind with neurotransmitter to change shape 3.Prevent release of neurotransmitter
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 axon myelin vessicle terminal branch channel protein dendrite exocytosis (active transport) synapse protein Mitochondia – R – provide ATP
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 3 Types of neurons sensory neuron (from senses) receive stimulus interneuron (CNS -brain & spinal chord) motor neuron (to effector – muscle/gland) produces response
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Human brain
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Primitive brain The “lower brain” medulla oblongata basic body functions breathing, heart, digestion, swallowing, vomiting homeostasis cerebellum coordination of movement and balance
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Higher brain Cerebrum 2 hemispheres left = right side of body right = left side of body Corpus callosum connection between 2 hemispheres
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Division of Brain Function Left hemisphere “logic side” language, math, logic operations, vision & hearing details fine motor control Right hemisphere “creative side” pattern recognition, spatial relationships, non-verbal ideas, emotions, multi-tasking
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Regents Biology 2003-2004 Simplest Nerve Circuit – Reflex Arc Reflex, or automatic response signal only goes to spinal cord - FASTER advantage essential actions don’t need to think or make decisions about (automated) blinking balance pupil dilation startle – “fight or flight”
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AP Biology Reflex ARC 2003-2004
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