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Essay Question #2. Scoring Guidelines: http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap07_biology_q3.pdf. Chapter 48 and 49. Neurons and the vertebrate brain. The Vertebrate Brain. Forebrain Midbrain Hindbrain. Embryonic Brain Regions. Fig. 49-9.
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Essay Question #2 Scoring Guidelines: http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap07_biology_q3.pdf
Chapter 48 and 49 Neurons and the vertebrate brain
Forebrain • Midbrain • Hindbrain Embryonic Brain Regions
Fig. 49-9 Cerebrum (includes cerebral cortex, white matter, basal nuclei) Telencephalon Forebrain Diencephalon Diencephalon (thalamus, hypothalamus, epithalamus) Midbrain Mesencephalon Midbrain (part of brainstem) Metencephalon Pons (part of brainstem), cerebellum Hindbrain Myelencephalon Medulla oblongata (part of brainstem) Diencephalon: Cerebrum Mesencephalon Hypothalamus Metencephalon Thalamus Midbrain Pineal gland (part of epithalamus) Myelencephalon Hindbrain Diencephalon Brainstem: Midbrain Pons Spinal cord Pituitary gland Forebrain Medulla oblongata Telencephalon Spinal cord Cerebellum Central canal (c) Adult (a) Embryo at 1 month (b) Embryo at 5 weeks
Oldest: brain stem • Middle: Cerebellum • Newest: Cerebral cortex/cerebrum Human Brain is like 3 brains in one.
Clear • Colorless • Surrounds CNS • Functions: • Buffers brain from skull • Buoys brain on spine • Waste products • Transport of hormones Cerebrospinal Fluid
Consists of: • Midbrain • Pons • Medulla Oblongatta • Functions: • Regulation of homeostasis – breathing, heart rate • Swallowing • Startle response • Autonomic nervous system • Coordination of body movement/balance The Brainstem
Develops from hindbrain • Coordination of movement and balance • Equilibrium • Receives sensory signals – voluntary movement • Joints • Muscle length, extension • Auditory, visual Cerebellum
Part of the forebrain • Develops into: • Thalamus • Hypothalamus (homeostasis, posterior pituitary gland) • Epithalamus (pineal gland, generates cerebrospinal fluid) Diencephalon
Develops from forebrain • Information processing • Olfaction, auditory, visual processing • 2 hemispheres • Grey matter – cerebral cortex • White matter – internal • Basal nuclei – within white matter Cerebrum
Large in mammals • Controls: • Perception • Voluntary movement • Learning • Highly convoluted • High surface area but can still fit in the skull Cerebral Cortex
Right and left sides control opposite side of the body • Connected by the corpus collosum • Thick band of neurons Cerebral Cortex
Frontal Lobe • Parietal Lobe • Occipital Lobe • Temporal Lobe Divisions of Human Cerebral Cortex
Fig. 49-15 Frontal lobe Parietal lobe Somatosensory cortex Motor cortex Somatosensory association area Speech Frontal association area Taste Reading Speech Hearing Visual association area Smell Auditory association area Vision Temporal lobe Occipital lobe
Consciousness • Goal setting • Inhibition • Attention • Time perception • Judgment • Control of emotional response • Internalization of language • Memory for habits & motor activities Frontal Lobe
Visual attention • Touch perception • Goal oriented voluntary movements • Manipulation of objects • Integration of different senses to allow for understanding of a single concept. Parietal Lobe
Vision • Visual perception • Recognition of printed words Occipital Lobe
Hearing ability • Memory acquisition • Some visual • Categorization • Emotion • Language Temporal Lobe
Nerve cells • Brain: group of nerve cells specialized for control of body systems • Ganglia (simpler nerve clusters) Neurons
Motor Neurons • From brain to muscle cells • Sensory Neurons • Transmit outside signals (from external stimuli, senses, muscle tension, stimuli within the body ie. Blood pressure) to brain • Interneurons • Short, carry signals very short distances • Mostly within the brain Types of Neurons
Fig. 48-3 Sensory input Integration Sensor Motor output Central nervous system (CNS) Effector Peripheral nervous system (PNS)
Central Nervous System • Brain • Spinal cord • Peripheral Nervous System • Carry information to and from the CNS Divisions of the Nervous System
Cell body • Dendrites • Axon • Axon hillock Neuron Structure
Fig. 48-4 Dendrites Stimulus Presynaptic cell Nucleus Axon hillock Cell body Axon Synapse Synaptic terminals Postsynaptic cell Neurotransmitter
Junction between an axon and another cell • Can be another nerve, muscle cell • Synaptic terminal • Neurotransmitters Synapse
Presynaptic cell • Postsynaptic cell Synapse
Support cells for neurons • Nourish • Insulate • Regulate extracellular fluid Glial Cells
Action potential • Utilize ions, electrical signals to propagate signal down an axon • Neurons are semi-permeable Neuron Signaling
Neurons are not sending a signal • Inside is negatively charged • Potassium can pass freely (K+) • Sodium (Na+) and Chloride (Cl-) cannot At rest
Pumps: • Na+, K+ ions • Resting potential -70mV Pumps within the Neuron Membrane
Cell becomes depolarized • “spike” in current • Causes resting potential to change from -70mV to closer to 0mV • MUST reach the critical threshold level to fire • All or nothing Creation of an Action Potential
Resting • Depolarization • Repolarization • Hyperpolarization Major Steps in Action Potentials
Na+ channels CLOSED • K+ channels maintain resting potential • Passive Resting
Na+ channels OPENed by stimulus • If potential reaches threshold, will trigger action potential • K+ channels CLOSED • Increases internal charge (causes spike) Depolarization
Na+ channels CLOSE • K+ channels OPEN to stabilize membrane potential Repolarization
Na+ become unblocked • K+ remain open and return membrane to resting potential Hyperpolarization
Steps of polarization occur down the neuron Propagation of the Action Potential
Fig. 48-11-3 Axon Plasma membrane Action potential Cytosol Na+ Action potential K+ Na+ K+ Action potential K+ Na+ K+
Fig. 48-12a Node of Ranvier Layers of myelin Axon Schwann cell Schwann cell Nodes of Ranvier Nucleus of Schwann cell Axon Myelin sheath