Neurons and Action Potentials - AP Psychology

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Question

Which of the following types of cells serve to provide support and nourishment to neurons?

Answer

Glial cells are located in the nervous system, and serve as support and protection for the neurons. Schwann cells, oligodendrocytes, astrocytes, and ependymal cells are all examples of neuroglia.

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Question

Which of the following is not part of a neuron?

Answer

Glia, also known as glial cells, are non-neuronal cells that provide support and protection for neurons located in the central nervous system. Neurons are made up of dendrites, axons, and a cell body (which is covered by the myelin sheath).

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Question

Which of the following parts of the neuron speeds up the relay of messages?

Answer

The myelin sheath coats the axon of a neuron and speeds up the transmission of messages. Myelin is a fatty coating that is unable to perpetuate the action potential signal. As a result, the signal jumps over the myelinated areas, bypassing much of the axon and speeding up transmission. This process is known as saltatory conduction.

The axon is the long, slender projection of a neuron that conducts electrical impulses away from the cell body. Dendrites are the branched projections of a neuron that recieve electrical stimulation from synapses and convey them to the cell body. The soma is the cell body of the neuron that contains the cell nucleus

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Question

What compound surrounds the axons of white matter neurons?

Answer

Myelin is a white, fatty compound that surrounds the axons of white matter neurons. Its purpose is to increase the speed of an action potential.

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Question

Which ion rushes into the axon of a neuron during an action potential?

Answer

At rest, there is a high concentration of sodium (Na+) outside the neuron and a high concentration of potassium (K+) inside the neuron. During an action potential, the gated channels for sodium open and, because there is such a difference in concentration, the sodium rushes into the axon. This makes the axon much more positive in charge. This positivity propagates along the axon until it reaches the end of the axon, where it triggers release of neurotransmitters into the synapse.

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Question

Which two principle ions are involved in neural action potentials?

Answer

The depolarization of the neural axon during an action potential is driven by an influx of sodium ions, entering through voltage-gated sodium channels. Following this stage, voltage-gated potassium channels are stimulated, allowing potassium ions to exit the axon and causing hyperpolarization. The sodium-potassium pump then restores the ions to their original positions in preparation for the next action potential, known as repolarization.

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Question

Which of the following is not a neurotransmitter?

Answer

Neurotransmitters are chemical substances that travel across synapses in the nervous system. Acetylcholine, dopamine, epinephrine, and GABA are all widely-studied neurotransmitters. Glucose, however, is a monosaccharide used for energy in the body. It serves no purpose as a neurotransmitter.

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Question

List the correct order of action potential propagation through a neuron.

Answer

After crossing the synapse, neurotransmitter molecules bind to receptors on the postsynaptic neuron, initiating an excitatory signal (EPSP). The signal then travels through the dendrites to the cell body, where it becomes an action potential based on the degree of stimulation from other EPSP signals. After traveling through the cell body and down the axon hillock, the signal is sent out by the axon to the axon terminal, or synaptic terminal. There, synaptic vesicles containing neurotransmitters are released into the synaptic cleft (the space between two neurons). Synaptic vesicles fuse with the membrane at the axon and release neurotransmitter into the synaptic cleft. The neurotransmitters diffuse toward the postsynaptic neuron and bind to receptors to begin the process again. Once the signal reaches an effector organ, the neurotransmitters can elicit their ultimate effect.

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Question

What is an agonist?

Answer

Agonists are chemicals that mimic the action of a neurotransmitter. Agonists bind to the same receptor sites as neurotransmitters, but cause their own unique biological responses. Agonists activate the receptors to which they bind.

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Question

Neurons that are responsible for relaying messages from the sensory organs to the central nervous system are ____________.

Answer

Afferent neurons, also known as sensory neurons, are the neurons that relay information to the central nervous system from the sensory organs. Efferent neurons are the motor neurons that carry the nerve impulses away from the central nervous system to the effectors. Interneurons are the neurons that transmit impulses between other neurons.

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Question

Motor neurons which are responsible for movement are also called...

Answer

Efferent neurons are responsible for relaying information from the central nervous system to the muscles or glands. These signals allow for movement.

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Question

Which is not a part of a neuron?

Answer

Cell wall is a cell organelle found in plants, bacteria and archea; it is not found in neurons. The soma is the cells body of the neuron, this is where the nucleus contained but the dendrites and axon are not part of the soma. Dendrites are short branched extensions of a neuron where impulses are received in the synapses and transmitted to the soma. Axons are the long threadlike part of the neuron that conduct the impulses from the soma to other cells.

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Question

Myelin sheaths insulate the axon of a neuron allowing for more efficient transmission of an action potential. These sheaths are made from ___________.

Answer

Glial cells are specialized cells found in the central nervous system. Myelin sheaths are made up of glial cells that insulate the axon of a neuron.

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Question

What is the name for the fatty covering over the axon that helps to speed up impulses?

Answer

The Myelin Sheath is a fatty substance that covers the axon and helps speed up impulses. A neuron is a nerve cell. Dendrites are the message receiving part of a neuron, and axons are the message sending part. A synapse is the gap between the terminal buttons of the axon of one neuron and the dendrites of another neuron. Soma is a term synonymous with cell body.

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Question

Neurons fire based on which principle?

Answer

Neurons fire according to the All-or-Nothing Principle, meaning that they will either fire completely or not at all. There is no in-between or half-fire.

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Question

What is the name of the time after a neuron fires?

Answer

The time frame when a neuron cannot fire because it has just fired is called the refractory period.

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Question

What causes the synaptic vesicle to move towards and fuse with the cell membrane allowing for release of neurotransmitter?

Answer

Action potentials travel down the axon to the axon terminal. When an action potential arrives in the axon terminal it signals the synaptic vesicles to move toward the cell membrane. The synaptic vesicle fuses with the cell membrane and releases neurotransmitter.

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Question

When leftover neurotransmitter is present in the synapse there is a process that allows the neurotransmitter to be reabsorbed by the releasing neuron. What is this process called?

Answer

Reuptake is a term used to describe the process of a neuron absorbing the remaining neurotransmitter back into the axon terminal for release. SSRIs used to treat depression, they function by inhibiting this reuptake process for serotonin.

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Question

Which neurotransmitter has an inhibitory effect on heart muscle fibers but has an excitatory affect on skeletal muscle fiber?

Answer

Acetylcholine affects movement, learning, memory and REM sleep. It has an excitatory affect on skeletal muscle fiber and an inhibitory affect on heart muscle fibers.

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Question

If a person is having issues with mood regulation and aggression they are most likely caused by which neurotransmitter?

Answer

Serotonin affects mood, sleep, appetite, impulsivity and aggression. If a person's level of serotonin is too high or too low it could affect mood and aggression. Depression has been directly linked to serotonin levels, and the most regularly prescribed Anti-Depressant drugs (SSRIs) regulat the serotonin re-uptake process, thus elevating the serotonin levels in patients.

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