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Summary Grade 11 Life science notes on the human nervous system £5.33   Add to cart

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Summary Grade 11 Life science notes on the human nervous system

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In detail notes/summery of the human nervous system and its disorders based on IEB textbooks and extra notes taken during lessons

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  • December 3, 2021
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  • 2021/2022
  • Summary
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Nervous system
Organisms detect and respond to stimuli to adapt and react to
surroundings and survive in changing environment.

Types
 Nervous system
 Endocrine systems

How it works
 They work together for communication and
homeostasis (self-regulating process by which an Remember:
organism tends to maintain stability while Stimulus is any
adjusting to conditions that are best for its internal or
survival) by responding to external and internal external
environment changes environmental
 For rapid response impulses are conducted in change which an
nerves = nervous coordination organism
 For slower response (growth/digestion) hormones responds
(chemical messengers) are transported in blood =
chemical coordination




Processing
Stimulus Detection and Response
intergration

Steps
1. Receptors detect stimulus it is conducted as nerve impulse along
network of nerve cells to CNS where information is processed and
integrated
2. Process information is conducted as nerve impulses from brain and
spinal cord via nerve cells to effectors
3. Effectors: organs (muscles and glands) that respond to original
stimulus




Human nervous system

,Subdivisions



Nervous system


Central nervous Perpheral nervous
system: 12 pairs of
sytem: brain and cranial nerves and 31
spinal cord pairs of spinal nerves




Motor nerves: consuct Sensory nerves:
impulses from CNS tp conduct impulses
effectors from receptors to CNS



Autonomic: consucts Somatic: conducts
Central nervous system impulses from CNS to impulses from CNS to
invoulentary muscles and
To receive nerve impulses from
some glands receptors, interoperate
vounlentary musclesinformation and
transmit it to effectors to bring about response

Protection of system
Sympathetic division: Parasympathetic:
 Nervous tissue is action
prepares for very soft and most cells cannot repair/regenerate.
returns body to
"fight or flight" normal "status qou"
 CNS is surrounded by external bone (skull and vertebral column)
 Cartilaginous discs between vertebrae and S-shaped aid shock
absorption and make it more flexible.

Three meninges (cerebral membranes) enveloping brain
 Pia mater: innermost that is tightly wrapped around brain and spinal
cord, rich in blood vessels to provide oxygen and nutrients to CNS
 Dura mater: tough outermost that lines skull cavity and spinal canal
 Arachnoid membrane: thin membrane between pia and dura

Cerebral fluid
 Between pia and arachnoid
 Shock absorber
 Supplies neurons with nutrients and oxygen
 Removes waste and prevents dehydration of neurons
 Maintains constant pressure around CNS
Grey matter vs white matter

 Grey matter: darker cell bodies and dendrites of neurons
 White matter: myelinated axons that appear white due to fatty
myelin sheaths that enclose axons
 Grey matter in brain is mostly outside and surrounds white matter
and is opposite in the spinal cord

, Brain

 Enlarged upper part of spinal cord and is divided into following parts:
Cerebrum, hypothalamus, cerebellum, medulla oblongata, midbrain,
pons, thalamus, corpus callosum, hypophysis/pituitary gland

Cerebrum
 Largest part
 Cerebral cortex: Outer layer with grey matter that has folds (gyri)
and groves (sulci) that enlarge brain surface
 White matter on the inside
 Cerebral hemispheres: Deep longitudinal fissure (groove) dividing
cerebrum in half
 Hemispheres are divided into lobes which are associated into
functions
 Lobes: frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital
 Corpus callosum: layer of white matter that partially joins two
hemispheres

Functions
 Origin of all voluntary actions
 Receives and interoperates nerves impulses from sense organs
where sensation of 5 senses arise
 seat of higher mental functions

Hypothalamus
 Situated below thalamus which is positioned below corpus callosum
 Tiny but important

Functions
 Maintenance of homeostasis regulating: blood pressure, heartbeat,
body temperature, water balance, hunger, apatite, thirst and sleep
 Responsible for driving forces: defence, reproductive behaviour,
migratory instincts and territory
 Control of emotions
 Controls functioning of hypophysis: secretes vital hormones
Cerebellum
 Behind and below cerebrum
 Vermis: worm like mass of nerve tissue connecting two hemispheres
 Surface has grooves that are more shallow and parallel
 Grey matter is outside white matter
 White matter is arranged like branched tree hence term ‘arbor vitae’
(Latin term for tree of life)

Functions

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