Smart Book Assignment Extra Credit chapter 12
Starting with a signal reaching the distal end of the presynaptic axon, indicate the correct order of events that occur during transmission at a cholinergic excitatory synapse.
1 Opening of calcium gates in synaptic knob as nerve signal arrives 2 Exocytosis of ACh; diffusion across synaptic cleft 3 Binding of ACh to receptors on postsynaptic neuron 4 Opening of sodium gates on post-synaptic membrane allowing influx of sodium 5 Depolarization of postsynaptic plasma membrane
The nervous system plays an important role in maintaining homeostasis. List, in order beginning at the top, the basic steps that describe how the nervous system carries out this task.
1. Information received by sensory receptors is transmitted to the CNS. 2. Information is processed and an appropriate response is determined. 3. A command is issued to effectors such as muscles or glands.
What is the approximate ratio of glial cells to neurons?
10:1
Which best describes an electrical potential?
A form of potential energy that can produce current
Which best describes signal conduction in unmyelinated axons?
A wave of depolarization opens more voltage-gated channels immediately distal to the action potential.
A cholinergic synapse uses which of the following as its neurotransmitter?
Acetylcholine
Select all that are categories of neurotransmitters based on chemical composition.
Acetylcholine Monoamines Amino acids Neuropeptides
Choose all the ways neuromodulators alter synaptic transmission.
Adjusting the sensitivity of postsynaptic neurons to neurotransmitters Altering the breakdown and/or reuptake of neurotransmitter Increasing the release of neurotransmitters by presynaptic neurons
Which process of a neuron is specialized for rapid conduction of nerve signals to structures relatively far away from the neuron cell body?
Axon
Name the area of the neuron indicated by the arrow labeled A.
Axon collateral
Which term applies to the small swellings at the distal end of the axon of a neuron that contain synaptic vesicles?
Axon terminals
Which term refers to the passage of proteins, organelles and other materials along an axon?
Axonal transport
Tetanic stimulation at a synapse is due to accumulation of which of the following in the synaptic terminal?
Calcium
Sensory (afferent) neurons do which of the following?
Carry signals to spinal cord and brain
What are the two major anatomical subdivisions of the nervous system?
Central and peripheral nervous systems
Which term refers to a synapse that releases acetylcholine from the presynaptic axon terminal?
Cholinergic
Which fundamental physiological property of neurons allows them to send signals quickly over long distances?
Conductivity
Choose all that are types of long-term memory?
Declarative Procedural
Choose all that are characteristics of local potentials.
Decremental Graded
The processes of a neuron that usually receive signals from other neurons are called
Dendrites
The soma of a neuron gives rise to branch-like processes called what? They are the primary sites for receiving signals from other neurons.
Dendrites
Which two organ systems are primarily responsible for coordinating the other bodily systems so as to maintain homeostasis?
Endocrine system Nervous system
Long-term potentiation may be involved in long-term memory. Choose all of the following that are molecular changes that occur in long-term potentiation.
Entrance of calcium into the dendrite Binding of glutamate to NMDA receptors The release of nitric oxide which triggers more glutamate release
Choose all that would cause postsynaptic stimulation to end.
Enzymatic degradation of neurotransmitter in the synaptic cleft Cessation of signals in the presynaptic nerve fiber Diffusion of neurotransmitter from the synaptic cleft into extracellular fluid Reuptake of neurotransmitter into the presynaptic knob
This picture illustrates neural transmission at which type of synapse?
Excitatory cholinergic synapse
True or false: Damaged nerve fibers in the CNS regenerate very fast whereas damaged nerve fibers in the PNS never regenerate.
False
True or false: Electrical synapses are able to integrate information and make decisions more rapidly than chemical signals.
False
True or false: The more synapses a neuron has, the lesser its information-processing capability.
False
In electrical synapses, electrical signals move quickly from cell to cell through which of the following?
Gap junctions
______ cells protect the neurons and help them function.
Glial
Short-term memory allows you to remember things for up to how long?
Hours
Which type of memory is important as you read (e.g. remembering the previous words in a sentence)?
Immediate
In a synapse, where are synaptic vesicles located?
In the axon terminal
Which correctly describe axonal transport?
It is bidirectional (retrograde and anterograde transport). It involves transport of proteins within the axon (i.e. synaptic knob enzymes or proteins that maintain the axolemma).
Which of the following contributes to the development of the resting membrane potential in neurons?
K+ is more concentrated in the ICF than in the ECF.
The myelin sheath is composed mostly of which of the following?
Lipids
Which term refers to decremental changes in electrical potential along a dendrite or the soma?
Local potentials
Which type of memory can store the most information?
Long-term
Declarative and procedural memory are two types of what?
Long-term memory
Which may be the basis for learning and long-term memory at the neuronal level?
Long-term potentiation
The ability of synapses to change is called synaptic plasticity. Which term refers to the neuronal pathways formed during learning?
Memory traces
Neurons with numerous dendrites and a single axon are structurally classified as which of the following?
Multipolar
The neuron has a rounded cell body and a short axon. The dendrites are branched like a tree with fine endings labeled, dendritic spines. Two multipolar neurons are shown with two types of dendrites and axon terminals.
Multipolar
The pathway of neurons within a neural pool is called its what?
Neural circuit
This picture illustrates that when a stimulus strength (weight) and stretch increase at a sensory fiber, the firing frequency of the neurons increase. Which term refers to the conversion of stimulus information into a meaningful pattern of action potentials?
Neural coding
Which term describes the ability of neurons to process information, store and recall it, and make decisions?
Neural integration
Which alter synaptic transmission by adjusting the sensitivity of postsynaptic neurons to neurotransmitters or by affecting the breakdown and/or removal of a neurotransmitter?
Neuromodulators
Sensory, association and motor are the three classes of what?
Neurons
Stimulation of the postsynaptic neuron will end when nerve signals stop arriving at the presynaptic axon terminal or when which of the following occurs?
Neurotransmitter is removed from postsynaptic receptors.
Choose all that are properties of action potentials.
Nondecremental (signal maintains amplitude) All or none Self-propagating
Which type of glial cell is indicated by the arrow labeled A?
Oligodendrocytes
Which types of glial cells are found in the central nervous system?
Oligodendrocytes Ependymal cells Astrocytes Microglia
Taken together, the sensory and motor subdivisions make up which of the following?
Peripheral nervous system
Neural integration is based on the combining together of which of the following?
Postsynaptic potentials
Which ion has the greatest influence on the resting membrane potential of most neurons?
Potassium
An electrical potential is a form of what type of energy?
Potential energy
Synapses in a certain pathway can be modified to allow signals to travel more easily across "trained" synapses. Which term refers to the process of making transmission easier?
Potentiation
Choose all the factors that influence the speed of nerve signal conduction.
Presence of myelin Diameter of axon
Which term refers to the period of time after a nerve cell has responded to a stimulus in which it cannot be excited by a threshold stimulus?
Refractory period
Immediate memory, which is the ability to hold something in mind for a few seconds, might be based on activity in which type of neural circuit?
Reverberating
Choose all that are the principal types of neural circuits.
Reverberating circuit Converging circuit Parallel after-discharge circuit Diverging circuit
Which neuroglial cell is found in the peripheral nervous system?
Satellite cell
Identify the type of cell indicated by the arrow labeled A.
Schwann cell
Which type of glial cell aids in regeneration of damaged peripheral nerve fibers by forming a regeneration tube to help reestablish the former connection?
Schwann cells
The release of a neurotransmitter is an example of which physiological property exhibited by a neuron?
Secretion
Afferent neurons are what type of neurons?
Sensory
Which is true about a neuron with a large diameter, myelinated axon as compared to a neuron with a small diameter, unmyelinated axon?
Signal conduction will be faster
Choose all that are names for the cell body of a neuron.
Soma Neurosoma
The sensory and motor divisions of the peripheral nervous system are further split into which two subdivisions?
Somatic and visceral
Membrane potential ranges from negative 80 to 40 and time are plotted on an increasing scale. The curve starts at negative 70 millivolts and rises in a wave-like pattern to 55 millivolts. The wave-like patterns represent stimuli. After that, the curve rises steeply to 30 millivolts and falls steeply (Action potential) to negative 55 millivolts and further below 70 millivolts before it levels out finally at negative 70 millivolts. A horizontal line starting at negative 70 millivolts is labeled, resting membrane potential and a horizontal line starting at negative 55 millivolts are labeled, threshold.
Summation
Which division inhibits digestion?
Sympathetic
Which term refers to the microscopic physical gap between the presynaptic and postsynaptic neurons at a chemical synapse?
Synaptic cleft
At its distal end, an axon has an extensive complex of fine branches called what?
Terminal arborization
What type of stimulation is caused by rapid, repetitive signals arriving at a synaptic knob, causing progressively larger quantities of calcium to accumulate and leading to synaptic facilitation?
Tetanic
Choose all the statements that characterize neurotransmitters?
They are released in response to stimulation. They bind to receptors and alter the physiology of the postsynaptic cell. They are synthesized by presynaptic neurons.
Choose all statements that are true about Schwann cells?
They assist in the regeneration of damaged nerve fibers. They form the neurilemma. They form the myelin sheath in the PNS
Choose all that are characteristics of neural pools.
They consist of complex patterns of interneurons. They may be concerned with a particular body function.
Choose all statements that are true regarding postsynaptic potentials?
They include EPSPs and IPSPs. They are changes in the membrane potential of the postsynaptic terminal of a chemical synapse. They are caused by neurotransmitters.
Why would the synapses of a memory trace undergo synaptic potentiation?
To allow easier signal transmission along pathway
What is the role of neural pools in the CNS?
To process information
True or false: Action potentials occur only where there are voltage-gated ion channels.
True
True or false: Unmyelinated nerve fibers (axons) in the PNS are enveloped in Schwann cells.
True
Which lists the structural categories of neurons?
Unipolar, bipolar, anaxonic, and multipolar
An axon lacking a myelin sheath is said to be what?
Unmyelinated
Choose all of the following statements that are true about signal conduction along unmyelinated fibers.
Unmyelinated fibers have voltage-gated channels along their entire length. A zone of depolarization excites voltage-gated channels immediately distal to the action potential.
How long can long-term memory last?
Up to a lifetime
Looking up a new phone number and then dialing it from memory utilizes which type of memory?
Working memory
The refractory period in which no stimulus of any strength will trigger a new action potential is the ______ refractory period.
absolute
The brain and spinal cord are components of the ______ nervous system, while the nerves and ganglia are components of the ______ nervous system.
central, peripheral
The nervous system must interpret quantitative and qualitative information about its environment, thus it converts information to a meaningful pattern of action potentials. This process is called neural
coding
The processes that branch from the somas of most neurons are called ______.
dendrites
Two organ systems are dedicated to internal coordination, communication between the other systems, and maintaining the overall homeostasis of the body. They are the----- system, which communicates by means of hormones, and the -------system which sends quick electrical and chemical messages from cell to cell.
endocrine, nervous
The myelin sheath is a spiral layer of ______ around a nerve fiber.
insulation
The neurons indicated by a letter "A" are structurally classified as ______ neurons. The neurons indicated by a letter "B" are structurally classified as ______ neurons.
multipolar, bipolar
In the CNS, myelin is produced by glial cells called
oligodendrocytes
Synapses are not fixed for life. In response to experience, they can be modified to make transmission easier or harder. The ability of synapses to change is called synaptic
plasticity
At a synapse, the neuron that responds to the neurotransmitter is the ______ neuron.
postsynaptic
At a synapse, the neuron that releases neurotransmitter is the ______ neuron.
presynaptic
There are two ways in which EPSPs can add up to produce enough activity to make a postsynaptic cell fire. They are temporal and spatial
summation
The autonomic nervous system is subdivided into the ______ division which tends to arouse the body for action and the ______ division which tends to have a calming effect.
sympathetic, parasympathetic