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The Nervous System. Communication Center. Central Nervous System (CNS): system of nerves, the spinal cord, and the brain that receives signals from environment and sends out responses to those signals Neuron : nerve cell Dendrites : fan like branches that receive impulses - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Nervous System
Communication Center• Central Nervous System (CNS):
system of nerves, the spinal cord, and the brain that receives signals from environment and sends out responses to those signals
• Neurons: nerve cell; 3 sections– Dendrites: fan like branches that
receive impulses– Cell body: main area of cell– Axon: long extension that sends
impulses on to other neurons or body cells
Regions of the Brain• 3 main sections:
1) Cerebrum- main area of the brain; divided into two hemispheres; where language, memory, intelligence, personality, muscle movement come from
2) Cerebellum- back of your brain; controls balance, senses, and coordination
3) Brain stem- connection between brain and spinal cord
Types of Neurons• Sensory neurons: receive
signals from the environment and send impulses to the spinal cord and brain
• Relay neurons: nerves that make up the brain and spinal cord; process impulses and send response impulses to motor neurons
• Motor neurons: react to impulses from brain and spinal cord; activate glands, muscles, etc..
They Mighty Reflex• I throw a ball at you. What
nerves first take in the input?– Sensory nerves in eyes
• The input to the brain quickly calculates distance, speed, angle, etc… to conclude if the ball will hit him. What nerve cells to this?– Relay neurons
• What is your reaction? What caused this?– Muscles move body away from
ball; Motor neurons • If input is strong enough, you
don’t even need his brain!
They Mighty Reflex• Where are relay neurons located?
– Brain AND Spinal Cord• Reflex action:
– When input is significantly higher/lower than normal, spinal cord sends response before brain even gets input
– Cuts only fractions of a second off but can save your life
• Reflex arc:– Sensory impulse travels to relays in
spine, set point comparison causes response on effector neurons
• Explains why we can feel temp, pressure, etc… BEFORE we feel pain (Brain is too slow)
The Senses
The 5 Major Senses• Smell• Taste• Touch• Hearing• Sight
• How our brain/body takes in stimulus from the environment
• How we learn about the world
Smell• Breathing air through your
nose pulls in particulate matter (chemicals floating in the air)
• Olfactory:– collection of receptors in top
of the nose– Chemicals bind to receptors,
and signals are sent to the brain
– Brain interprets good and bad smells based on what chemicals are detected
• Why have a sense of smell?
Good Smells vs. Bad Smells• Things smell good because
they are good for the body or the mind:Meat- smell of fats and proteinsFlowers- smell triggers release of hormones that relax usFruits- smell of sugars and vitamins
• Things smell bad because they might kill us:Waste material- contain bacteria; no usefulmaterialRotten Food- contain bacteria; bad for digestion
Taste• Smell and taste are strongly
linked• Taste buds:
- receptors for each of the 5 tastes:
salty, sweet, sour, bitter, umami- Chemical reacts with receptor and signals are sent to the brain
Why do things taste good? Why do they taste bad?
Hearing• Sound travels as waves
through media (air, water, etc…)
• Eardrum:– Vibrates to changing pressure
from sound waves– Vibrations travel through the
body’s smallest bones(Malleus, Incus, and Stapes)
• Cochlea:– Vibrations from travel into fluid– Fluid activates hire-like receptors
which send impulses to the brain– Ear as a hair for different
frequencies
Hearing (Balance)• Cochlea as 3 semicircular
canals filled with fluid and motion receptors (hair-like)
• Movement in the fluid triggers impulses that tell the brain direction and orientation
• Small Ca+ stones inside also push down on the hairs
Why?-Feel which way is up/down
Touch• A collection of different
receptors:– Temperature– Pressure– Pain
• Different parts of the body have higher concentration of touch sensors– Eyelids, fingers, feet, tongue,
etc…• Some receptors fire faster
than others:– You can feel the texture of an
object before its temperature
Sight• Sight is detecting the photons of light
bouncing of objects– 80% of all you know comes from sight
• Conjunctiva: protective layer; cleaned by tears
• Cornea: transparent cover over eye• Pupil: opening into the eye• Iris: colored membrane that changes
size due to light intensity• Lens: focuses the light to clear the
image; made of clear cells• Retina: special part of the eye that
reacts to photonsImages passing through the lens are flipped and our brain learns to flip them back
Light Level and Depth• Iris muscles muscles
change diameter to iris– Low light make wider pupil
(dilated)• Need more light
– Bright light make narrower pupil (constricted) • Need less light; may damage
receptors in eyes
• Two eyes = two sets of information– Brain compares sets to
produce 3D image (depth perception)
Seeing Colors• To see clearly, light must be focused
on the fovea– Center point on the back of the retina;
has most receptors• Rod cells:
detect low levels of light (black and white)• Cone cells:
detect high levels of light (color)S- detect blue lightM- detect green lightL- detect red light
Overlapping signals from cones create the other colors
Extra Senses• Echolocation: use
sound waves to find objects
• Infrared vision: can see heat of an object
• UV vision: see UV signals
• Electroreception: can sense electric fields
• Magnetoreception: can sense magnetic fields