Biology Topic 8- Grey Matter

studied byStudied by 0 people
0.0(0)
get a hint
hint

neurone/ nerve fibre

1 / 52

Tags and Description

Topic 8 key definitions and functions of the nervous system's structures.

53 Terms

1

neurone/ nerve fibre

a single cell that transmits an impulse

New cards
2
<p>sensory neurone </p>

sensory neurone

function: dendrites synapse with receptor cells to conduct an impulse to the CNS

location: dendrites and dendron outside CNS but cell body in the dorsal root ganglia at the entrance to the spinal cord

structure: cell body between axon and dendron above the plane. short axon but long dendron

New cards
3
<p>relay neurone </p>

relay neurone

function: dendrites synapse with sensory neurones, terminal branches synapse with motor neurones

location: whole neurone within the CNS

structure: cell body between axon and dendron

New cards
4
<p>motor neurone </p>

motor neurone

function: dendrites synapse with relay neurones, terminal branches synapse with effector cells

location: cell body within the CNS, axon leaves the CNS

structure: dendrites lead into cell body (no dendron), long axon

New cards
5
<p>function of myelin sheath and the advantages of it structure</p>

function of myelin sheath and the advantages of it structure

the myelin sheath is formed of Schwann cells, and wraps around the axon to provide protection from damage. it is composed of a predominantly lipid membrane which allows it to act as an electrical insulator preventing depolarisation of the neurone where it is present.

New cards
6

nodes of Ranvier

gaps between cells that provide an area along the axon where depolarisation can occur. transmission is therefore faster as the impulse jumps from node to node (saltatory conduction)

New cards
7

axon

carries impulses away from the cell body

New cards
8

dendron

carries impulses towards the cell body

New cards
9
<p>the pupil reflex</p>

the pupil reflex

the autonomic nervouse system controls the antagonistic pair of muscles in the iris:

  • to increase the diameter of the pupil (sympathetic nervous system), the radical muscles contract, and the circular muscles relax

  • to decrease the diameter of the pupil (parasympathetic nervous system), the circular muscles contract, and the radical muscles relax

New cards
10

the resting potential

the potential difference across the cell membrane of a neurone at rest, usually -70mV.

to conduct an impulse the inside of the membrane must initially be more negative on the inside- the membrane must be polarised

New cards
11

depolarisation

the rapid influx of sodium ions into the neurone which cause an increase in the charge inside the cell membrane and the membrane potential to increase- usually +40mV

New cards
12

hyperpolarisation

the drop in membrane potential below the resting potential due to open K+ channel- usually -80mV

New cards
13

threshold potential

the point at which a sufficient amount of sodium ion channels open for the influx of Na+ into the axon is greater than the outflow of K+ ions- usually -55mV

New cards
14

all-or-nothing response

any generator potential that reaches the threshold level will produce an action potential of equal magnitude

New cards
15
<p>primary photoreceptor: rod cell</p>

primary photoreceptor: rod cell

provides black and white vision and is specialised to work in dim light. contains rhodopsin

New cards
16

primary photoreceptor: cone cell

colour vision

New cards
17

rhodopsin structure and function

photochemical pigment located in the membranes of vesicles in the outer segment of rod cells. upon absorption of light, it breaks down into retinal and opsin

New cards
18

retinal

non-protein that converts from cis-retinal to trans-retinal

New cards
19

opsin

protein that activates a series of membrane bound reactions ending in the hydrolysis of a cyclic nucleotide to result in the closure of non-specific cation channels in the membrane of the outer segment

New cards
20

glutamate

neurotransmitter that is released from rod cell in the dark and binds to bipolar cell and causes its membrane to becomes hyperpolarised, preventing an action potential

New cards
21

dark adaptation

enables the eye to transition from a high light setting to a low light setting to restore retinal sensitivity. involves the conversion of trans-retinal to cis-retinal to recombine with opsin to form rhodopsin- requires ATP and can take upto 50 minutes

New cards
22
<p>structure of the cortex/ cerebrum </p>

structure of the cortex/ cerebrum

grey matter- highly folded outer layer composed of nerve cell bodies, synapses and dendrites.

white matter- underneath the grey matter, composed of millions of myelinated axons connecting neurones in different areas

the cortex is divided into two cerebral hemispheres

New cards
23

frontal lobe

decision making, reasoning, planning, emotion, forming associations

New cards
24

temporal lobe

process of auditory information, hearing, sound recognition, speech, memory

New cards
25

occipital lobe/ visual cortex

processes information from the eyes: vision; colour; shape; perspective

New cards
26

parietal lobe

orientation, sensation, calculation, recognition, memory

New cards
27

motor cortex

connects to spinal cord, brain stem and muscles via motor neurones. stores informtaion about how to carry out movement

New cards
28

corpus callosum

white matter composed of axons: allows connection between the two hemispheres and the brain structures

New cards
29

medulla oblongata

regulates heart rate (cardiovascular control centre), breathing rate (ventilation centre), and blood pressure

New cards
30

cerebellum

balance: coordinates movement as it is being carried out

New cards
31

hypothalumus

controls thermoregulation (thermoregulatory centre), thirst, hunger, circadian rhythms, and sleep- acts as an endocrine gland and stimulates the pituitary gland

New cards
32

thalamus

routes all incoming sensory information to the correct lobes

New cards
33

basal ganglia

selects and initiates stored programmes for movement

New cards
34

hippocampus

involved in laying down long-term memory

New cards
35

pituitary gland

endocrine gland responsible for secreting hormones hat control growth, blood pressure, energy management, sex organs, thyroid gland, metabolism, pregnancy, childbirth, nursing, water/ salt concentration at the kidneys, temperature, pain relief

New cards
36

midbrain

relays information to the cerebral hemispheres

New cards
37

pons

relays information from the forebrain to the cerebellum and the medulla. involved in sleep, breathing, respiration, swallowing, bladder control, hearing, taste, eye movement, facial expressions and sensations. implicated in sleep paralysis and dreaming.

New cards
38

MRI (magnetic resonance imaging)

combination of a magnetic field and radio waves that cause hydrogen nuclei to change orientation and release energy that is detected and converted into an image.

can be used for identifying soft tissues, tumour location and size, stroke damage, injuries to brain, spinal cord and joints

advantages- does not use X-rays, thin slices of image are created to produce a 3D image, better resolution that CT

disadvantages- loud noise, small imaging space- not good for small children or people with claustrophobia or special needs, cannot be used on people with metal implants.

New cards
39

fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging)

areas of high neural activity can be seen as ‘lighting up’ - these areas have a high demand for oxygen and so blood flow to them increases. oxyhameoglobin in the blood does not absord fMRI signals (radio waves) and so the areas with high activity will absorb less radio wave. must comapre with brain activity at rest

able to study the brain in action and determine different areas of the brain associated with human activities

advantages: no X-rays, very high resolution and 4 images produced per second so a process can be followed over a short period of time

disadvantages: expensive, patient must lie completely still, only measures blood flow and not how individual neurones are behaving

New cards
40

CT scans (computerised axial tomography)

narrow beam X-rays are fired at different angles around the patient where the beam is reduced in strength depending on the density of the tissue. X-rays are then detected and slices of tissue are created

used for investigating soft tissues ie. brain, tumour growth

advantages: more resolution than broad beam X-ray, soft tissues can be imaged

disadvantages: X-rays not good for pregnant women, pixture is frozen, looks at structure rather than function, limited resolution so small structures cannot be distinguished

New cards
41

PET scans (positron emission tomography)

radiotracers (isotopes with short half-lives) are incorporated into compounds such as water, glucose, or molecules that bind to receptors. the radiotracers are injected into the patient’s bloodstream. blood flow will increase to areas of activity in the brain due to greater oxygen and glucose demand. the radiotracers moved to these areas wil emitt positrons as they decay, which will collide with electrons in the tissue, producing gamma rays which are then picked up by detectors and converted to a signal, and an image is produced. the brighter the area the more the neural activity.

can be used in the diagnosis and monitoring of heart disease, cancer, and brain disorders

advantages: can follow changes in disease progression or treatment if video images are played in succession

disadvantages: expensive, radioactive tracers mean it can only be carried out once or twice a year, after a scan the patient cannot travel by public transport due to potentially coming into contact with a pregnant person

New cards
42

critical period

period during visual cortex development where exposure to many different visual stimuli is required for full development of neural connections

New cards
43
<p>link from retina to the occipital lobe</p>

link from retina to the occipital lobe

axons leaving the retina arrive at the thalumus

the axons then leave and each connect up with a specific occular dominance olumn cell in the visual cortex in the occipital lobe

New cards
44

perception

creation of an image, involving knowledge and experience to interpret sensory information from the retina- has to be learnt (not innate)

New cards
45
<p>examples of depth perception studies</p>

examples of depth perception studies

cross cultural studies (carpented world hypothesis), crawling babies (visual cliff experiment)

New cards
46

Hubel and Weisel experiment

newborn kittens and monkeys exposed to monocular deprivation for different lengths of time during their critical period. when exposed to light, the column cells in the visual cortex corresponding with the light deprived eye did not respond.

New cards
47

habituation and its importance

the effect seen when animals gradually stop responding to a stimulus after repeated exposure

allows animals to ignore and prevent wasting energy on unimportant stimuli to concentrate on more threatening or rewarding stimuli

New cards
48

morality

concepts concerned with the code of behaviour considered right or acceptable for the norm of a particular society

New cards
49

ethics

concepts concerned with what is right and what is wrong regardless of moral concerns

New cards
50

absolutism

the view that something should not be done for any reason

New cards
51

relativism

view that there may be circumstances where something is justified normally when the benefits of a research outweighs the harm to the animals

New cards
52

arguments for animal research

  • benefits of the research may outweigh the harm to the animals

  • invertebrates have less complex/no nervouse systems so will feel less/no pain

  • many mammals have the same organs performing the same functions

  • non-animal methods do not provide enough information

  • all research involving animals is approved by the home office and inspectors check animal welfare

  • regulation is underpinned by the three R’s

New cards
53

arguments against animal research

  • use of any animal is wrong or unethical

  • vertebrates have complex nervous systems- can feel pain

  • animals cannot give consent- they have rights

  • animal coukd die or be permenantly affected

  • significant species differences mean that it is not possible to extrapolate data for human accurately

  • alternatives such as tissue culture can be used

  • some research could be viewed and not essential

New cards

Explore top notes

note Note
studied byStudied by 13 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 8 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 5 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 17 people
Updated ... ago
4.5 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 6 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 11 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 4 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 18 people
Updated ... ago
4.5 Stars(2)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards Flashcard187 terms
studied byStudied by 24 people
Updated ... ago
4.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard59 terms
studied byStudied by 16 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard65 terms
studied byStudied by 22 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard53 terms
studied byStudied by 26 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard105 terms
studied byStudied by 13 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard53 terms
studied byStudied by 39 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard103 terms
studied byStudied by 31 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard44 terms
studied byStudied by 45 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)