1 / 70

Nervous System Jeopardy

Nervous System Jeopardy. Round 1. Round 2. Round 1. Final Jeopardy Round 1. Round 2. What are the two parts of a neuron specifically designed for the sending and receiving of electrical impulses?. Dendrite – Receiving Axon – Sending . Round 1.

faunus
Download Presentation

Nervous System Jeopardy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nervous System Jeopardy Round 1 Round 2

  2. Round 1 Final Jeopardy Round 1 Round 2

  3. What are the two parts of a neuron specifically designed for the sending and receiving of electrical impulses? Dendrite – Receiving Axon – Sending Round 1

  4. Which type of neuron receives the initial stimulus? Sensory Neuron Exs. Eye stimulated by light, Hand stimulated by touch Round 1

  5. What do motor neurons stimulate? Effectors, or target cells that produce some kind or response Ex. Stimulate muscles to create movement Round 1

  6. Why do neurons need a lot of Oxygen? Aerobic respiration, sending impulses involves a lot of energy. Round 1

  7. Explain the flow of information to and from the brain. sensory neurons, integration (brain or interneurons) motor neurons to effector Round 1

  8. Name at least 3 protective components to the brain Skin/Scalp Skull Meninges CSF Blood brain barrier Round 1

  9. The double layer protective layer of the brain. dura mater Round 1

  10. List the meninges in the correct order from scalp to brain Dura Mater Arachnoid Pia mater Round 1

  11. What does the olfactory Nerve and Optic nerve control? -sensory- smell - sensory- sight Round 1

  12. List at least 5 organs the vagus nerve controls heart Lungs Liver Spleen Stomach Intestine Round 1

  13. What is the control organ of the body Brain.. Round 1

  14. Of what does a central nervous system consist? a brain and a spinal cord Round 1

  15. What does the somatic nervous system do? It contracts the skeletal muscles Round 1

  16. What does the autonomic nervous system control? controls the activity of organs and various involuntary muscles Ex. Cardiac and Smooth Round 1

  17. What does the peripheral nervous system consist of? the somatic and the autonomic nervous systems Round 1

  18. Controls our ability with music including rhythm WHAT IS THE RIGHT TEMPORAL LOBE? Round 1

  19. process visual input Occipital lobe Round 1

  20. receive sensations of touch, body position, hearing PARIETAL LOBES DO Round 1

  21. The brain-stem structure that controls breathing and heart rate medulla oblongota Round 1

  22. Lobe of the brainimportant for hearing Temporal Round 1

  23. Consciousness is controlled by what? multiple parts of the brain Round 1

  24. What are the respective functions of each hemisphere of the brain? left hemisphere – this is essential to language and logic operations right hemisphere – pattern recognition, nonverbal ideation, and emotional processing. Musical and spatial abilities Round 1

  25. Emotions are controlled by what part of the brain? the limbic system or a ring of cortical and noncortical centers around the brainstem mediates primary emotions and attaches emotional “feelings” to survival-related functions Round 1

  26. Language and speech are controlled by what parts of the brain? the frontal lobe (broca’s area) speech Temporal- Wernicke’s area Round 1

  27. Intelligence is associated with this area frontal lobes Round 1

  28. What is a myelin sheath? glia cells that wrap themselves around a neurons axon to protect it and speed up impulses Round 1

  29. What are the three main types of glia cells and what do they do? astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and Schwann cells Astrocytes provide support for neurons. Oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells both form myelin sheaths, oligodendrocytes in the CNS and Schwann cells in the PNS Round 1

  30. What does cerebrospinal fluid do? cushions the brain and spinal cord, brings the cells nutrients, and washes away wastes Round 1

  31. What type of glia cell connects the brain to it’s blood supply? astrocytes Round 1

  32. What do schwann cell produce myelin sheath Round 1

  33. Final Jeopardy Answer Round 1 Symptoms: • Memory loss, • dementia, • depression, • social withdrawal; • plaques and tangles Round 2 More Review

  34. Final Jeopardy What is the Alzeimhers? Answer

  35. Round 2 Final Jeopardy Round 2 More Review

  36. The medulla oblongata, pons, and midbrain are all part of what section of the brain? The brianstem This controls functions such as breathing rate, regulates arousal and sleep, and conducts sensory and motor signals between the spinal cord Round 1

  37. What two types of matter is the cerebrum made out of? white and gray matter Round 1

  38. What does the cerebellum control? Motor, perceptual, and cognitive functions Round 1

  39. What does the band of axons called the corpus callosum do? connects the left and right hemisperes of the brain Round 1

  40. What is the function of the hypothalmus? regulates homeostasis This includes the following functions: feeding, fighting, fleeing, and reproducing. It is also a thermostat, an appestat (adjusts appetite), a thirst center, and regulates circadian rhythms. Round 1

  41. What does the cerebral cortex control? voluntary movement and cognitive functions Round 1

  42. What embryonic part of the brain give rise to the thalamus, hypothalamus, andepithalamus in adults? the diencephalon Round 1

  43. What is the difference between white and gray matter? White matter has myelin sheaths surrounding the neurons and gray matter is just the neurons and their axons Round 1

  44. The cerebellum controls cognitive functions among others. Give two examples of a cognitive function. learning, decision-making, conciousness, and an integrated sensory awareness with surroundings Round 1

  45. What feature of the neocortex (part of the cerebrum) allows humans’ and other mammals’ brains to have a larger surface area? convolutions, or indents Round 1

  46. Unlike the PNS, what can the CNS not do? the CNS cannot repair itself after injury Ex. brain and spinal cord injuries, strokes, and diseases that destroy the neurons (Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s) Round 2

  47. What is the responsive region at the leading edge of the growing axon called? The growth cone Round 2

  48. True or False:the human does not produce new neurons after birth False Dr. Peter Erickson did an experiment in which he dissected the brains of terminal cancer patients upon their deaths. He found newly divided neurons in the hippocampus of all the patients. Round 2

  49. True or False:Mature neurons cannot divide True new neuron development comes from stem cells that survive in the brain, not mature neurons Round 2

  50. What are four major diseases and disorders of the nervous system? Schizophrenia Depression Alzheimer’s Parkinson’s Round 2

More Related