What is the function of the Nervous System?. The nervous system is made of structures that control the actions and reactions of the body in response to.

Post on 19-Dec-2015

218 Views

Category:

Documents

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

Transcript

What is the function of the Nervous System?

• The nervous system is made of structures that control the actions and reactions of the body in response to stimuli from the environment

• There are two parts: the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous system (PNS)

• The brain and the spinal cord make up the CNS• The brain is the body’s central command organ and

is constantly receiving impulses from all over your body

• The spinal cord allows your brain to communicate with the rest of your body

The PNS Connects the CNS to Muscles and Organs

• The PNS has two main parts – the sensory part and the motor part• Sensory gathers information and motor

responds to information• Many brain processes happen

automatically – involuntary (ex. heart beat)• Some actions of your brain you can

control – voluntary (ex. moving your arm)

The Brain

• There are three main areas of the brain – the cerebrum, the cerebellum and the brain stem

• Cerebrum – largest part - where you think and problem – solve and where most of your memories are stored

• It controls voluntary movements and allows you to sense touch, light, sounds, odors, pain, heat and cold

• Cerebellum – 2nd largest part – processes information from your body – allows brain to keep track of body position and coordinate movements

• Brain stem – connects brain to spinal cord – medulla is part of the brain stem – controls involuntary processes (blood pressure, body temp)

The Spinal Cord

• The spinal cord is made of a bundle of nerves• A nerve is a collection of nerve cell extensions

bundled together with blood vessels and connective tissue

• The spinal cord is surrounded by protective bones called vertebrae

• Special cells in your skin and muscles carry sensory information to the spinal cord

• The spinal cord carries the information to the brain • The brain interprets the impulses as pain or warmth

and sends information back to the spinal cord • Different cells in the spinal cord send impulses to

the rest of the body as a response

How Do Signals Move Through the Nervous System?

• The nervous system works by taking information from the environment and translating that information into an electrical signal

• Electrical signals are sent by the brain to the rest of the body by special cells called neurons

• Neurons move messages in the form of fast moving electrical energy called impulses

• Signals move through the CNS and PNS with the help of glial cells

• Glial cells don’t transmit nerve impulses but protect and support neurons

Neurons

• Two groups of neurons – sensory neurons and motor neurons

• Sensory neurons – gather information from in and around the body – they move this information to the brain

• Motor neurons – move impulses from the brain and spinal cord to other parts of the body

• The four main parts of the neuron are the cell body, the axon, the dendrites and the axon terminal

• Cell body – large region that contains the nucleus and organelles

• Dendrite – a usually short, branched extension of the cell body – neuron may have one or several – cell body gathers information from the dendrites and creates an impulse

• Axon – extension of the neuron that carries the impulse away from the cell body – neuron has only one axon – can be short or long – impulses move in one direction along the axon

• Axon terminal – located at the end of the axon – where signal is changed from an electrical signal to a chemical signal called a neurotransmitter

What Are the Main Senses?

• Sight – your eye allows you to see the size, shape, motion and color of objects around you

• The front of the eye is covered by a clear membrane called the cornea

• Light passes through an opening called the pupil • Light hits the eyes lens – an oval-shaped piece of

clear curved material – eye muscles change the shape of the lens to focus light onto the retina

• The retina is a layer of photoreceptor cells that change light into electrical impulses

• These cells called rods and cones generate nerve impulses that are sent to the brain

What Are the Main Senses?

• Sensory cells in your ear turn sound waves into electrical impulses – these impulses travel to your brain

• Sound waves are funneled by the outer ear toward the middle ear – the waves make the eardrum vibrate - eardrum is a thin membrane separating the outer and middle ear

• The vibrating eardrum makes three tiny bones vibrate• The last bone vibrates against the cochlea – a fluid filled

organ in the inner ear• Inside the cochlea, the vibrations make waves in the fluid• Sensory receptors called hair cells move – their

movement causes neurons in the cochlea to send electrical impulses

• Impulses travel to the brain via the auditory nerve

What Are the Main Senses?

• You feel a tap on your shoulder – the tap produces impulses in sensory receptors in your shoulder that travel to the brain• Once the impulses reach your brain,

they create an awareness called a sensation• Skin has different receptors that

detect temperature, pressure, pain and vibration

What Are the Main Senses?

• Your tongue is covered with taste buds • Taste buds have clusters of cells

called taste cells that respond to signals in dissolved molecules of food• Taste cells react to five basic tastes:

sweet, sour, salty, bitter and savory

What Are the Main Senses?

• The nose is the sense organ for smell – receptors for smell are located in the nasal cavity

• Sensory receptors called olfactory cells react to chemicals in the air

• These molecules dissolve in the lining of the nasal cavity and trigger an impulse in the receptors

• The nerve impulses are sent to the brain where they are interpreted as an odor

• Your sense of taste and smell work together to allow you to taste a variety of food flavors

• Both senses detect chemical cues in the environment

top related