Structure of the Nervous System
76 important questions on Structure of the Nervous System
What is a horizontal plane section?
Where does the dorsal root of the spinal cord send it's information?
Dor(sal) je rug te breken = verlamming ezelsbruggetje
What is the function of the Somatic Peripheral Nervous System (sPNS)?
Contain motor neuron (AXONS ONLY)
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Where do the cell bodies/dendrites/axons of motor neurons lie?
Dendrites: CNS (not important)
Axons: PNS
Where do Somatic Sensory Neurons lie? & What is their function?
SO position:
Dorsal Root Ganglia
What is the function of the Autonomic/Visceral PNS?
What is the function of Meninges & Which 3 are there?
3 Membranes:
- Dura Mater: Outer Layer
- Arachnoid Membrane
- Pia
What is inbetween of the Pia & The Arachnoid Membrane?
How many ventricles are there and what are ventricles?
What does a CT scan reveal of the brain?
- Vesicles
What is neurulation? What happens if this goes wrong?
Goes wrong: Spina Bifida (open back)
Anencephaly (open head)
Interna Capsula: Function?
Also from cortex to spine (Corticospinal tract)
What does the Midbrain differentiate into? What are the functions?
Functions: Conduit for info passing from/to forebrain
What does the tectum differentiate into? What are the functions of the new area's?
Inferior Colliculus: Auditory information relay station (to thalamus)
What are the functions of the hindbrain?
Movement control
Autonomic NS regulation
Conduit spinal cord from/to forebrain
Where does the cerebellum get input from? Whats the function of the cerebellum?
Fine motor control
What is the function of the pons?
- Connecting cerebral cortex with cerebellum
What input do the Dorsal Horn Cells in the spinal cord get?
What is the Function of Ventral Horn Cells in the spinal cord?
What cells are in the intermedial zone of the spinal cord & what is their function?
Function: Shape motor outputs in response to sensory input & brain command
What do we mean by the spinal cord being a conduit?
What are similarities of the brain from rats/humans? What are differences?
Difference: Gyri & Sulci in human much deeper
How many cell layers are there in the cortex? Where are the cell bodies?
Cell bodies are NOT in layer 1 (top) --> At least 1 layer does project to layer 1 though
What is the difference and similar between anscestors brains and our brains?
Similar: Primary sensory areass & secondary sensory areas with heavy interconnections with those primary sensory area's
How come we can perceive endless flavors?
2. Flavor comes from smell &&&&& taste
3. Other sensations/senses (texture/temperature)
When will a stimulus evoke a perception of taste, if we look at taste cells?
What are the Apical End, Microvilli and Taste Pore of a taste receptor cell?
Microvilli: Extension of apical end --> Projects into taste pore
Taste Pore; Opening in the tongue surface (exposure to mouth content)
What type of neurons are taste cells? How do their axons connect
Form synapses with gustatory afferent axons near bottom of taste bud
What is the process of the firing of a Taste cell?
Depolarization large enough --> Action potential --> Voltage gated calcium channels open --> Release of neuro transmitters
What neurotransmitter do sour & salty use?
(and some others but thats not important)
When talking about taste, what tastes use ATP as a neurotransmitter?
(use some other transmitter but not important)
What is taste transduction?
How does salt/sour change potention/channels of a taste cell?
SOUR: also can bind to & block the ion channels depending on the type of cell
How do bitter, sweet & umami influence cell channels?
Salt flavor --> Neurotransmitters into synaps: What happens?
Sour flavour --> Neurotransmitters into synaps: What happens?
Bitter flavour --> Neurotransmitters into synaps: What happens?
Dimers: 2 proteins are affixed to each other
T2R receptors are poison receptors
Sweet, Bitter & Umami are all G-protein-coupled: What receptors do they bind on?
Sweet: T1R2 & T1R3
Umami: T1R3 & T1R3
How does the flavour signal from the taste bud go to the cortex?
Where do taste axons bundle together?
- Slender Gustatory Nucleus (medulla)
What does taste information diverge into?
- Neocortex (via thalamus): sensory information
- VentroPosteroMedial nucleus(VPM): Sends axons to the primary gustatory cortex
What happens in lesions of the thalamus or the gustatory cortex?
What is the Labelled Line Hypothesis of taste and why is it incorrect?
Incorrect:
- Receptor cells are not specific for basic tastes (overlap)
- Primary axon sets are even less specific
- Single cell responses are ambiguous
The labelled line hypothesis is probably wrong, what is correct about neural taste coding?
Population Coding Schemes:
- There are some specific receptors but population coding (broadly tunes neurons) are used for the stimulus properties
What is a Olfactory Ephethelium?
What 3 types of cells are in the Olfactory Epithelium?
Supporting cells: Glia
Basal cells: source of new receptor cells
What are olfactory cells coated with and what is it's function?
- Proteins in mucus concentrate the odorants
- Contains Antibodies to protect the brain
Where to in the mucus do odorants bind?
What does an olfactory receptor neuron look like?
1 unmyelinated axon
Coated in mucus
What does the Olfactory Nerve (Cranial Nerve 1) consist of? Where does it end in?
Ends in: Olfacotory Bulb
Smell --> Action potential: What happens?
How can 100 types of receptor cells code for infinite type of smells?
Each receptor protein binds differnt odors.
Receptor cells are senstitive to certain odors
BUT:
Each odorant activates many differne receptors
What are glomerulli & What is their function?
Provide precize mapping between 25.000 primary smell axons to 100 second order axons
- Modulated by a lot of systems
What is the main coritcal area for smell?
(Doesn't pass through thalamus)???
How can the brain distinct 2 odorants when 1 olfactory cell can't?
2. Sensory map: odor organized into spatial maps
3. Temporal Coding: Time essential to coding
What area's are involved in the visual system pathway (brain?)
Primary Visual Cortex
Striate cortex
What is the function of striate cortex in visual processing?
What is a Retinofugal projection?
projection away from the retina
How does the optic nerve travel?
What happens in the optic chiasm?
What are the targets of the Optic Tracts? What are the function of these targets?
- Hypothalamus: Biological rhythms & sleep
- Midbrain: Pupil size control
- Midbrain tectum (superior colliculus): Eye orientation
What is the input & output of LGN neurons in the thalamus?
- Retinal Ganglion cells
- V1 (corticofugal feedback)
- Input from brain stem neurons (attention, alert)
Output:
- Visual cortex (via optic radiation)
What are the 3 streams of visual information in the LGN?
2. P-type cells: Parvocellular (smaller neurons)
3. Koniocellular LGN layers: Tiny neurons (input from nonM&nonP cells and project to visual cortex)
What is so special about visual pyramidal cells?
What is the input & output of the different layers of striate cortex?
- IVCa: Magno
- AVCb Parvo
Output:
- Layer 2,3,4b pyramidal cells: Other cortical areas
-Layer 5: Superior Colliculus & Pons
-Layer 6: Feedback to LGN
How can we see ocular dominance in the striate cortex and in what layer?
Layer 4
What is orientation selectivity and what neuron-layers are this? (visual)
Layers:
- LGN
- Retina layers of the IVC
What is direction selectivity?
What are simple cells (visual)?
- ON/OFF Fields
What are complex neurons (visual)?
No ON-OFF center
What are Blob Receptive fields? (visual)
Most importantly: Wavelength sensitive
- No simple way to distinguish blob vs interblob cells
What is the path of the M-Type (magno-cellular) pathway? (& What function?)
- Motion perception & motor action guidance (WHERE PATHWAY)
What is the P-type pathway (Parvo-interblob pathway)? & Function?
Fine object analysis: (WHAT pathway)
What is the path of the Blob pathway of visual processing? (what is the function?)
What is a cortical module? What is nescessary & sufficient when talking about a cortical module?
Cortical Module: Block of cortex that is either:
- Nescessary: Removing the block leaves a blind spot
- Sufficient: This block contains all neural imagery to analyze both form & color
What area's are in the ventral stream? & Functions
Area V4:
- Input: Blobs & interblobs of striate
- Large receptive fields
- Color & Orientation selective
Area IT:
- Input: output of V4
- Output to: Temporal lobe
- Complex neurons that respond to faces & objects
- Fusiform face area
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