The Nervous System Anatomy & Physiology 2. Organization of the nervous System Central nervous system (CNS) – the brain and spinal cord –Interprets incoming.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 7 The Nervous System.
Advertisements

NERVOUS SYSTEM Coordinates all activities in the body by transmitting messages back and forth to every cell of the body through _________________.
Chapter 7 The Nervous System
The Nervous System.
Overview The Nervous System. The nervous system of the human is the most highly organized system of the body. The overall function of the nervous system.
NERVOUS SYSTEM Coordinates all activities in the body by transmitting messages back and forth to every cell of the body through nerves.
Nervous System Outline
Central Nervous System. Major Anatomic regions of Brain Cerebrum Diencephalon Brainstem Cerebellum.
8 th Grade Information Processing. Question: How do your feet know when to move when you want to walk?
The Nervous System *.
Chapter 7:6 The Nervous System.
Anatomy & Physiology Nervous System.
Nervous System.
The Nervous System Chapter 36.
 Nervous system is sensitive to pressure, taste, hormone levels, and light, sound and blood pH levels  Converted to signals and sent to the brain via.
ANATOMY NERVOUS SYSTEM OVERVIEW. Nervous System  The nervous system of the human is the most highly organized system of the body.  The overall function.
Chapter 3 Biology and Behavior. Sensation, perception, memory, and thinking are all psychological processes that have at least a partly biological basis.
The Nervous System.
Nervous System Roles Monitors changes –What are the changes? Processes and interprets sensory input Effects a response.
Final Jeopardy Question Nervous System Classification Brain Anatomy Nerves Brain protection Brain Anatomy 2 Nerve impulse
The Nervous System Lesson 5: Standard 9b. Students know how the nervous system mediates communication between different parts of the body and the body’s.
The Muscular System Muscles contribute to the outward appearance of animals and are essential for movement, posture, breathing, circulation, digestion,
The Brain. Divisions Cerebrum Diencephalon Brainstem Cerebellum.
The Brain Spinal Cord – Mass of nerve tissue located in the vertebral canal – Extends from Medulla Oblongata to 2 nd lumbar vertebrae – Transmits electrical.
Nervous System Ch. 49. Nervous System -Found in every part of the body from the head to the tips of the fingers and toes. -Divided into central nervous.
Guided Notes for the Central Nervous System. 1. During embryonic development, the CNS frist appears as a simple tube, the neural tube, which extends down.
The Nervous System.
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 7 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM Schaefer Hedgepeth. Divisions of the Nervous System Central Nervous System Peripheral Nervous System Somatic Nervous System Autonomic.
The Human Body The Nervous System
Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology Fifth edition Seeley, Stephens and Tate Slide 2.1 Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin.
Frontal lobe Temporal lobe Occipital lobe Parietal lobe Frontal association area Speech Smell Hearing Auditory association area Vision Visual association.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Regions of the Brain  Cerebral hemispheres (cerebrum)  Diencephalon  Brain.
Nervous System: Reflexes & Brain Lobes
Main Function: This communication system controls and coordinates functions throughout the body and responds to internal and external stimuli. Our nervous.
$100 $200 $300 $ $200 $300 $400 $500 Parts of a Neuron Org of NS Reflexes Action Potential Areas of the Brain 1 Areas of the Brain 2. Nervous System.
The Nervous System Chapter 11.
Nervous System Page 203. Nervous System Directs the functions of all human body systems 100 billion nerve cells Divided into two sections ▫Central Nervous.
Nervous System. NERVOUS SYSTEM Two Parts Central (CNS) Peripheral (PNS)
The Nervous System.
Central Nervous System
The Nervous System Vocabulary Review.
Unit 3.1 The Nervous System
ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY/THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The Nervous System.
Anatomy & Physiology Nervous System. 2 main sections – Central Nervous System (CNS) – Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
Your Brain Pawson, PVMHS The neuron 2 hemispheres: Right & Left  In theory – left brain is analytical and objective, right brain is thoughtful.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Central Nervous System (CNS)  CNS develops from the embryonic neural tube 
The Brain Four Major Regions Cerebral hemispheres Diencephalon
The biological basis of behavior liudexiang. contents Neurons The central nervous system The peripheral nervous system.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Central Nervous System (CNS)  CNS develops from the embryonic neural tube 
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 7 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 7 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
Regents Biology The Nervous System: Overview  The Nervous System controls and coordinates all the functions of the body.  The Nervous System.
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The nervous system is the master controlling and communicating system of the body. The nervous.
Regions of the Brain Cerebral hemispheres Diencephalon Brain stem
Human Physiology: The Nervous System PPT #2 chapter 29 in text.
Chapter 24 Regulation. Why do you respond to changes around you? Your responses are controlled by your nervous and endocrine system. Together these 2.
COMMUNICATION, CONTROL AND RESPONSE Nervous System.
Your Brain CHAPTER 29.1 – Nervous System  You have 2 different major nervous systems  Peripheral nervous system (PNS)  Central nervous system.
Click on a lesson name to select. Chapter 33 Nervous System Section 1: Structure of the Nervous System Section 2: Organization of the Nervous System.
The Nervous System. Functions of the Nervous System Respond to internal and external stimuli Transmit nerve impulses to and away from CNS Interpret nerve.
PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by Patty Bostwick-Taylor, Florence-Darlington Technical College Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing.
Brain: Parts and Functions
 Central Nervous System (CNS)  Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
The Central and Peripheral Nervous System
Chapter 29 – The Nervous and Endocrine Systems
Chapter 7 The Nervous System
Your Brain Pawson, PVMHS 2014.
Central Nervous System
Presentation transcript:

The Nervous System Anatomy & Physiology 2

Organization of the nervous System Central nervous system (CNS) – the brain and spinal cord –Interprets incoming sensory information and issues instructions based on past experiences and current conditions Peripheral nervous system (PNS) – the nerves that extend from the brain and spinal cord –Link and carry all the information to the CNS

Organization of the nervous System The PNS is divided into 2 subdivisions –Sensory division: keeps the CNS informed of events going on both inside and outside the body –Motor division: activates muscles and glands

Organization of the nervous System The motor division has two subdivisions: –Somatic nervous system: voluntary controls the body –Autonomic nervous system: regulates involuntary activities

Nervous Tissue Nerve Cells –The main part of the nervous system –The human body contains numerous nerve cells –Nerve cells are called neurons –Neurons are similar to electrical wires and carry messages along long, thin strands –They can reach up to a meter in length –A nerve is a bunch of neurons bunched together

Nervous Tissue Nerve Cells –Have all the organelles that other cells have, but look very different –Dendrites receive information from other neurons –Axons sends information to other neurons –A synapse is a connection between 2 neurons

Nervous Tissue Nerve fibers are covered with a whitish, fatty material called myelin When the myelin completely cover the nerve cells it called the myelin sheath It’s function is to make nerve cells faster

Nervous Tissue Not all cells are mylinated In the brain there are dense collections of myelinated regions called white matter and dense collections of unmyelinated regions called gray matter

Pathway of Messages Information is sent on 2 different pathways – it is not the same pathway For example: if you touch something hot the information is sent to your brain on one pathway and the result of touching something hot (it burns) is sent on another pathway Nerve cells do not touch one another – the information skips across the synapse

Nervous System Parts Nerve cells are important parts of the nervous system, but others include: The brain –The organ that sends, receives and processes information from all body parts –It is made of billons of neurons Spinal cord –Carries information from the brain to the body –All information from the body is first sent to the spinal cord, then to the brain

The Brain

Parts: –Cerebrum –Diencephalon (interbrain) –Brain stem –Cerebellum

The Brain Cerebrum –The cerebrum has two cerebral hemispheres –Has elevated ridges of tissue called gyri and shallow grooves called sulci which provide landmarks –Controls thought, reason, senses, speech, memory, consciousness, interpretation of sensation and voluntary movement

The Brain Cerebrum –Occipital lobe – visual area –Temporal lobe – auditory area –primary motor area – controls movement –Broca’s area – involved in speech –Frontal lobe – intellectual reasoning and socially acceptable behavior

The Brain Cerebrum –Corpus callosum – connects the cerebral hemispheres Diencephalon –Sits atop the brain stem –Contains the thalamus, hypothalamus and epithalamus

The Brain Diencephalon –Thalamus: quickly recognizes pleasant or unpleasant sensations –Hypothalamus: controls body temp, water balance and metabolism; also drives emotions –Epithalamus: important to the endocrine system

The Brain Brain stem –About the size of a human thumb –3 parts midbrain, pons, medulla oblongata –Midbrain: controls and directs incoming impulses –Pons: helps control breathing –Medulla oblongata: controls heart rate, blood pressue, breathing, swallowing and digestion

The Brain Cerebellum –Has two hemispheres –Large cauliflower-like structure under the occipital lobe –Helps make movement smooth and not robot-like and controls balance

Nervous System Parts Spinal Cord –About 17 inches long –Can be thought of as the power lines from the power plant –Spinal cord is protected by vertebrae (series of bones) Is a two-way passage system All the nerves that extend from the spinal cord are called body nerves

Reflexes Reflexes are reactions that are quick and protective During a reflex the message does not reach the brain first, but reacts, then tells the brain the information How a reflex works –If you put your hand on a hot stove the information is sent to your spinal cord through one pathway, through another pathway information is sent back to your hand to move, along yet another pathway information is sent to your brain and finally through another pathway information is sent to your hand that it hurts