Anatomy and Physiology ch. 12, 13, & 14 practice questions
______ acts as cushioning fluid that floats the brain.
CSF (cerebrospinal fluid)
______ bathes the exposed surfaces of the central nervous system.
CSF (cerebrospinal fluid)
The presence of ______ ions causes the synaptic vesicles to bind to the membrane, allowing neurotransmitters to be released.
Calcium
True or false: A neuromodulator is another name for a neurotransmitter.
FALSE A neuromodulator regulates the response of a neuron to a neurotransmitter.
Prefrontal eye field (is part of frontal cortex)
What is C
______ are star shaped.
astrocytes
Ventricles are ______ in the brain.
cavities
One half of the cerebrum is called a ______.
cerebral hemisphere
The ______ are paired, irregular masses of gray matter buried deep within the central white matter in the basal region of the cerebral hemispheres.
cerebral nuclei
Synapses are classified as:
chemical synapses and electrical synapses
Each cerebral hemisphere is divided into five ______.
lobes
The function of a neuron is dependent on ______.
resting membrane potentials changing
The cavities within the brain are called .
ventricles
The measure of the difference in electrical charge between two areas is called a _______.
voltage
Funiculi of the spinal cord are composed of ______ matter.
white
If a subthreshold value is reached on an axon membrane, an action potential ______.
will not occur
Initially, the voltage-gated Na+ channels are closed and the membrane potential is ______ mV. As Na+ flows in the membrane potential changes to ______ mV and the threshold is reached.
-70, -55
Events of an EPSP in order
-Excitatory neurotransmitter released from the presynaptic neuron. - The neurotransmitters bind to chemically -gated sodium channels on the postsynaptic membrane. - Sodium channels open.
The central nervous system is made of the______and spinal _______.
Brain & Cord
CSF is normally a ______ liquid.
Clear, colorless
white and gray matter
In the figure, the letter A is representing ______ matter and the letter B is representing ______ matter.
The electrical gradient in a resting neuron is such that the _______ of the cell is negative relative to the _______ .
Inside or cytosol Outside or interstitial
Repolarization is due to the opening of voltage-gated _______ and the subsequent movement of _____ out of the cell.
K+, K+
Dopamine
Monoamine A neurotransmitter associated with movement, attention and learning and the brain's pleasure and reward system.
The threshold is reached when the ______ ions flow into the cell.
Na+
The nerve impulse has the voltage-gated ______ channels opened first followed by the opening of the voltage-gated ______ channels.
Na+ and K+
Which of the following pumps can you find in the plasma membrane?
Na+, K+, Ca2+
Which of the following membrane transporters are present throughout the membrane of a neuron?
Na+/K+ pumps sodium leak channels potassium leak channels
Neuronal pools are also called ______.
Neuronal pathways and neuronal circuits
The sequential opening of voltage-gated sodium channels is followed by the sequential opening of voltage-gated_______ channels.
Potassium or k+
Na+ and K+ leak channels and Na+/K+ pumps on the neuron are responsible for establishing and maintaining the_______ membrane_______ .
Resting and Potential
The flow of ______ ion is the most common cause of depolarization.
Sodium
The two factors that affect PNS regeneration are ______.
The amount of damage and the distance between injury and the effector organ
left cerebral hemisphere
The figure shows the ______ cerebral hemisphere.
True or false: Graded potentials vary in size depending on the stimulus.
True
True or false: The primary visual area (cortex) interprets incoming visual information.
True
Dendrites
What is A
motor speech area (Broca's area)
What is A
primary gustatory cortex
What is A
Axon
What is B
Primary motor area (cortex)
What is B
primary olfactory cortex
What is B
axon collateral
What is C
primary auditory cortex
What is C
premotor area (PMA)
What is D
primary visual cortex
What is D
terminal extensions
What is D
A synapse is a junction between ______
a neuron and another cell
Action potentials are always propagated along an axon at the same ______ but ______ can vary depending on the strength of the stimulus.
amplitude and frequency
A substance synthesized at the cell body must undergo ______ transport to reach the synaptic knobs.
anterograde
Cells that act as "gatekeepers" that permit materials to pass to the neurons of the brain from the capillaries are called ______.
astrocytes
Which glial cell occupies the space of dying neurons?
astrocytes
The myelin sheath covers ______.
axons of neurons
Cytoplasm within an axon is called ______.
axoplasm
There is a ______- brain barrier that prevents harmful materials from the brain.
blood
Many excitatory neurotransmitters cause the opening of channels that allow for the flow of ______.
both Na+ and K+
Which are components of the central nervous system?
brain and spinal cord
The total length of the axon is called the ______ segment.
conductive
The main activity of the ______ is the propagation of an action potential along the axolemma.
conductive segment
The ______ provides rigid support that protects the brain.
cranium
A positive change in the membrane potential is called ______.
depolarization
Another way for the neurotransmitter to be removed from the synaptic cleft is by ______ where there is uptake by surrounding glial cells.
diffusion
Glial cells ______ transmit electrical impulses.
do not
Creating and transmitting _________ currents is central to the function of neuron physiology.
electrical
A difference in the number of charged particles between two sides of the membrane forms a(n) ______.
electrical gradient
Which of the following are characteristics of neurons?
excitability, conductivity, secretion, extreme longevity, amitotic
A larger axon transmits an impulse ______ than a smaller axon.
faster
A potential that is a temporary change in membrane potential which lasts only as long as the stimulus that causes it and can vary in size is called a ______ potential.
graded
The cerebrum is composed of two halves called the left and right cerebral .
hemispheres
Neuronal pools are made of ______.
interneurons
During an action potential, voltage-gated potassium channels open after voltage-gated sodium channels. The effect this has on the membrane potential is ______.
it becomes less positive and more negative
The myelin sheath is made of a high percentage of ______.
lipids
The protective membranes that surround, stabilize and partition parts of the brain are called the cranial _____.
meninges
The brain interprets the increased frequency of nerve signals as a ______ stimulus.
more intense
______ neurons are most common.
multipolar
Most motor neurons are______
multipolar neurons
The presence of a sheath increases the rate of impulse conduction.
myelin
A cablelike bundle of axons in the peripheral nervous system is called a ______.
nerve
A ______ is the propagation of an action potential along an axon.
nerve impulse
What is the primary tissue of the nervous system?
nervous tissue
The neural plate is induced by the notochord to form a tube.
neural
Neuromodulation alters the response of ______ to neurotransmitters.
neurons
The components of nervous tissue that conduct electrical impulses are ______.
neurons
Neuropeptide
neurotransmitter type that includes protein molecules and shorter chains of amino acids, Ex enkephalin
______ are released from neurons in response to conductive activity.
neurotransmitters
substances that can pass through the blood-brain barrier.
nicotine, alcohol, some anesthetics
Neural tissue begins as a thickening of a portion of the ectoderm that overlies the ______.
notochord
A nerve is part of the ______ nervous system.
peripheral
Voltage is a measure of relative ______ energy.
potential or electrical
Membrane molecules that use the energy of ATP to move ions against a concentration gradient are called _______.
pumps or proteins
______ is the return of polarity from positive back to negative (the RMP).
repolarization
The removal of neurotransmitters from the synaptic cleft by transport into the synaptic knob is known as ______.
reuptake
The representational hemisphere in most people is the ______ hemisphere.
right
Glial cells are ______ than neurons.
smaller
A damaged axon within the PNS can regenerate if Blank______.
some neurilemma remains
The all-or-none law refers to the fact that action potentials will only occur if the initial segment reaches ______.
threshold or -55mV
Vesicles involved in retrograde transport are moving ______ the cell body.
toward
Most of the central white matter is grouped into bundles called ______.
tracts
Glycine
An amino acid; an important inhibitory neurotransmitter in the lower brain stem and spinal cord.
The nerve impulse causes ______ in the number of calcium ions that enter the synaptic knob.
An increase