What is the basic stimulus-response chain?
stimulus - receptor - coordinator - effector - response
What are taxes (taxis)?
Movements in a specific direction that are directed by a stimulus such as light or food (movement towards/away from a stimulus)
What are kineses?
Random movements that are not directed by a stimulus (not towards/away from a stimulus). The more unfavorable the stimulus, the more rapidly the organism moves and the more frequently it changes direction
What is a tropism?
A growth response of part of a plant in response to a directional stimulus
What is positive phototropism and how does it occur?
Plant shoot grows towards the light
What is gravitropism and how does it occur?
How is the nervous system organised?
CNS - consists of brain and spinal chord
PNS (peripheral nervous system) - consists of sensory nervous system and motor nervous system
How is a reflex arc formed through standing on a pin?
Why are reflex arcs important?
How are hormonal and nervous responses different?
What type of potential do sensory receptors produce and how?
generator potential - change in membrane potential of a receptor cell
What is the structure of the pacinian corpuscle?
a neuron ending surrounded by layers of connective tissue with viscous gel between (lamellae)
How does the pacinian corpuscle transduce the mechanical energy of a stimulus into a generator potential?
How does a greater pressure affect the pacinian corpuscle?
causes more sodium ion channels to open, so there is a greater influx of sodium ions, leading to a greater generator potential
How are action and generator potential different when exposed to different intensity stimuli?
generator potential - higher intensity stimulus = greater generator potential
action potential - higher intensity stimulus = greater frequency of action potentials
What is the retina?
contains light-sensitive cells, rods for dim light, cones for colour. It sends nerve impulses to the brain
What is the blind spot?
where blood vessels and nerves join the eyeball
What is the optic nerve?
receives nerve impulses from the retina and sends them to the brain
How does the eye change for distant focus?
How does the eye change for close focus?
What is the structure of the retina?
How do rods and cones differ with bipolar neurones in the retina?
several rod cells synapse with one bipolar cell
one cone cell synapses with one bipolar cell
What are the pigments found in rods and cones?
rods - rhodopsin
cones - iodopsin
Why is mitochondria needed in large quantities in rod and cone cells?
release energy used to synthesize pigments