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Key Concepts in Neurophysiology and Sensory Systems

Study Guide - Smart Notes

Tailored notes based on your materials, expanded with key definitions, examples, and context.

  • Initiation of Action Potentials: Sodium ions (Na+) are primarily responsible for initiating action potentials in neurons.

  • Resting Membrane Potential: Key contributors include the sodium-potassium pump, ion channels, and selective permeability of the cell membrane. Synaptic transmission is not a direct contributor.

  • All-or-None Principle: This principle applies to all excitable membranes, meaning an action potential either occurs fully or not at all.

  • Graded Potentials: Distinguished by their magnitude varying with stimulus strength, unlike action potentials which are all-or-none.

  • Hyperpolarization and Action Potentials: Prolonged opening of chloride channels in the postsynaptic membrane causes hyperpolarization, making the neuron more difficult to stimulate and less likely to generate action potentials.

  • Relative Refractory Period: A stronger stimulus is required to generate an action potential due to the efflux of potassium ions (K+).

  • Pacemaker Cells: Cardiac muscle cells can spontaneously generate action potentials without external input due to specialized pacemaker cells.

  • Pericytes: These contractile cells along blood vessels interact with endothelial cells and astrocytes, regulating blood flow and maintaining the blood-brain barrier.

  • Eye Movement Coordination: The superior colliculi in the brain coordinate eye movements, especially when tracking moving objects or prey.

  • Purely Sensory Cranial Nerve: The optic nerve is an example of a cranial nerve that is purely sensory.

  • Referred Pain in Myocardial Infarction: In addition to chest pain, pain from a heart attack can also be present in the jaw.

  • Somatosensory Cortex Representation: The brain allocates more space to the upper lip, eyes, and hands, but not to the gums.

  • Sensory Receptors for Temperature and Pain: Free nerve endings are responsible for detecting changes in temperature and pain.

  • Osmoreceptors: These sense changes in osmotic pressure or solute concentration and are classified as interoceptors.

  • Tonic Receptors: These receptors are activated in scenarios involving prolonged or continuous stimuli, such as heightened sensitivity to dim light after entering a dark room.

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