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Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System
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Page 1: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Unit 8: Communication and Control

The Nervous System

Page 2: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Communication and Control

• Together the nervous and endocrine systems continually monitor conditions inside and outside of the body and adjust function to maintain homeostasis

• The endocrine system produces hormones which travel through blood act fairly slowly on target tissues

• The nervous system produces impulses and neurotransmitters which act extremely fast to send messages along nerves

Page 3: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Weird Science• Our nervous system creates tiny electrical currents to send messages around the body.

• What if we could generate large and powerful currents and shoot them from our bodies, like a great or evil superpower?

• That would be pretty awesome, right?• Well, we can’t. But there are a few animals that have that power. Most famously, the electric eel.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 4: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Electric Eel• Not really an eel. It’s a knifefish.

• capable of producing one amp of current driven by up to 750 volts - enough to kill eight people.

• used for navigation, communication, attracting a mate and to stun or even kill prey.

• How do they do it? And how do they not shock themselves?

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 5: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

What are the 3 basic functions of the nervous system?

• 1) sensory function (detect internal & external stimuli)

• 2) integrative function (processing, analyzing storing information)

• 3) motor function (carry info from brain/SC to muscles and organs, response)

Page 6: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Organization of the nervous system

Page 7: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Structures of the nervous system

• Billions of neurons & neuroglia

• Brain & cranial nerves• Spinal cord & spinal nerves• Ganglia: small masses of nervous tissue

Page 8: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

What is a nerve?

• A bundle of up to thousands of neuron axons + associated connective tissue & blood vessels

Page 9: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

What is a neuron?

• Functional, conductive unit of the nervous system

• Nerve cell

Page 10: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Neuroglia

• Other cells of the nervous system

• Do not generate or carry nerve impulses

• Can grow and multiply, unlike neurons

• Glioma is a tumor of the neuroglia

Page 11: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Myelination

• Lipid & protein coating around axons

• Produced by Schwann cells in PNS or oligodendrites in CNS

• Nodes of Ranvier= gaps in the myelin at intervals

• White matter= myelinated neurons• Gray matter= unmyelinated neurons

Page 12: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Where are white & gray matter found?

brain spinal cord

Page 13: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

The Impulse

• Electrical signal passed along neurons

• Action potentials travel long distances

• Generation & conduction of an action potential depend on movement of ions across the cell membrane

Page 14: Unit 8: Communication and Control The Nervous System.

Ion channels

1. Leakage channels: always open, K+ and Na+ constantly able to diffuse in & out

2. Gated channels: open & close in response to stimuli, creating electric excitability1. Change in voltage2. Response to chemical stimulus3. Response to mechanical stimulation

(vibration, pressure, stretching, etc.)