NERVOUS SYSTEM STUDY GUIDE 1. 3 FUNCTIONS OF NERVOUS SYSTEM 2. 2 MAJOR NERVOUS SYSTEMS 3. AFFERENT VS. EFFERENT NERVES. What does each do? 4. SOMATIC VS AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM What does each do? Which is involuntary? 5. SYMPATHETIC VS PARASYMPATHETIC What are some things that happen when you get scared? When you have just had a big meal? 6. Draw the Graphic Organizer for the nervous system 7. ANATOMY
Premium Nervous system Neuron
Central Nervous System Stimulants Types Stimulants can range from mild legal forms like caffeine to severe illegal drugs like methamphetamines. Each type has different effects at different levels and all can be lethal if taken in excessive quantities. The first type is the cocaine family which consists of cocaine HCL‚ cocaine freebase or crack‚ and cocaine paste. Then there are a wide arrange of amphetamines which are synthetic versions of the ephedra plant like Adderall which is used to help with
Premium Stimulant Methamphetamine Nicotine
The nervous system is the most important system in the body. It transmits impulses to and from the brain. Disruption of the nerve cells and fibers that transmit the messages severely impairs the body’s ability to carry out complex function. Once a disruption occurs‚ one may never recover and neurological function will steadily degrade. Multiple Sclerosis is a disease that disrupts this network. Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is the most common disabling neurological disease in young adults between 20 and
Premium Multiple sclerosis Immune system Neuron
plane; elbow Biaxial: movement in two planes; jaw Multiaxial: movement in or around all three planes; shoulder 2. How does rotation differ from circumduction? Rotation is the turning of a bone around its own axis; circumduction is the circular movement of a limb. Circumduction can only be executed by a ball-and-socket joint‚ while the majority of rotation comes from pivot joints. 3. What is the specific role of the menisci of the knee? What about the anterior and posterior cruciate
Premium Joint Knee Group
Physiological psychology is a complex but fascinating field of study. It explores the relationship between our biological systems and behavior. Structure and function of the nervous system from the neuron to the brain‚ as well as the interrelationships between the brain and such behaviors as eating‚ sleeping‚ learning‚ memory‚ emotion‚ and mental disorders will be discussed using examples from the behavior of both humans and lower organisms. Policies Faculty and students/learners will be held responsible
Premium Nervous system Brain Central nervous system
Gross Anatomy of the Central Nervous System Laszlo Vass‚ Ed.D. Version 42-0011-00-01 Lab RepoRt assistant This document is not meant to be a substitute for a formal laboratory report. The Lab Report Assistant is simply a summary of the experiment’s questions‚ diagrams if needed‚ and data tables that should be addressed in a formal lab report. The intent is to facilitate students’ writing of lab reports by providing this information in an editable file which
Premium Brain Central nervous system Nervous system
Chapter 11 – Fundamentals of the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue I. The 3 Overlapping Functions: a. Sensory Input: b. Integration: c. Motor Output: II. Levels of Organization in the Nervous System: a. Central Nervous System (CNS): b. Peripheral Nervous System (PNS): i. Sensory (afferent) Division: ii. Motor (efferent) Division: 1. Somatic Nervous System: 2. Autonomic Nervous System (ANS): a. Sympathetic Division: b. Parasympathetic
Premium Action potential Neuron Nervous system
Emily Muñoz 1/7 period Nervous System The nervous system consist of all the nerves the body has. Controlling not only the actions the body takes but the emotions a human being feels. The spinal cord‚ brain‚ and many nerves revolve around the nervous system. There are three overlapping functions that use millions of sensory receptors‚ that monitor the body. By monitoring the body the functions detect any changes the human body has had.Two components separate the nervous system allowing us to focus
Premium Nervous system
state” (Swierzewski 2015). Within the first year of infection‚ after going through stage 1 and stage 2‚ the bacteria goes to sleep and remain dormant‚ or noninfectious‚ for up to 30 years. However‚ it does not mean that the person is considered free from the infection because it is still present in the body and can still be passed on to another person. For instance‚ a pregnant woman‚ at this stage‚ is likely to pass the infection on to the unborn because the disease is present in the blood. “T. pallidum
Premium Sexual intercourse Human sexual behavior AIDS
PhysioEx Lab Unit 1 Print Options This box will be automatically hidden when printing. ← Back to Set Page Alphabetize terms Flip terms and definitions 2hr OGTT level aboe 200mg/dl: confirms diabetes dx 2hr. OGTT level b/w 140-200mg/dl: impaired glucose tolerance absolute refractory period: period when cell membrane is totally insensitive to additional stimuli‚ regardless of the stimulus force applied. ACTH: hormone released by the anterior pituitary. stimulated by a hypothalamic hormone
Premium Diabetes mellitus Blood sugar Insulin