Chapter 3: The Mind's Machine

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/43

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

44 Terms

1
New cards

Action Potential

a rapid reversal of the membrane potential that momentarily makes the inside of the membrane positive with respect to the outside

2
New cards

Intracellular Fluid

also called cytoplasm; the watery solution found within cells

3
New cards

Extracellular Fluid

the fluid in spaces between cells

4
New cards

Cell Membrane

the lipid bilayer that ensheathes a cell

5
New cards

Microelectrode

an especially small electrode used to record electrical potentials inside living cells

6
New cards

Resting Potential

the difference in electrical potential across the membrane of a nerve cell at rest

7
New cards

Millivolt (mV)

a thousandth of a volt

8
New cards

Neurophysiology

the study of the life processes of neurons

9
New cards

Ion

an atom or molecule that has acquired an electrical charge by gaining or losing one or more electrons

10
New cards

Anion

a negatively charged ion, such as a protein or chloride ion

11
New cards

Cation

a positively charged ion, such as a potassium or sodium ion

12
New cards

Ion Channel

a pore in the cell membrane that permits the passage of certain ions through the membrane when the channels are open

13
New cards

Potassium Ion (K+)

an atom that carries a positive charge

14
New cards

Sodium Ion (Na+)

an atom that carries a positive charge

15
New cards

Selective Permeability

the property of a membrane that allows some substances to pass through, but not others

16
New cards

Diffusion

the spontaneous spread of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration until a uniform concentration is absorbed

17
New cards

Electrostatic Pressure

the propensity of charged molecules or ions to move toward areas with the opposite charge

18
New cards

Sodium-Potassium Pump

the energetically expensive mechanism that pushes sodium out of a cell, and potassium ions in

19
New cards

Equilibrium Potential

the point at which the movement of ions across the cell membrane is balanced, as the electrostatic pressure pulling ions in one direction is offset by the diffusion force pushing them in the opposite direction

20
New cards

Axon Hillock

the cone-shaped area on the cell body from which the axon originates

21
New cards

Hyperpolarization

an increase in membrane potential (the interior of the neuron becomes even more negative)

22
New cards

Depolarization

a decrease in membrane potential (the interior of the neuron becomes less negative)

23
New cards

Local Potential

an electrical potential that is initiated by stimulation at a specific site, which is a graded response that spreads passively across the cell membrane, decreasing in strength with time and distance

24
New cards

Threshold

the stimuli intensity that is just adequate to trigger an action potential in an axon

25
New cards

All-or-None Property

referring to the fact that the size (amplitude) of the action potential is independent of the size of the stimulus

26
New cards

Afterpotential

the positive or negative change in membrane potential that may follow action potential

27
New cards

Voltage-Gated Na+ Channel

selective channel that opens or closes in response to changes in the voltage of the local membrane potential; mediates the action potential

28
New cards

Refractory

temporarily unresponsive or inactivated

29
New cards

Absolute Refractory Phase

a brief period of complete insensitivity to stimuli

30
New cards

Relative Refractory Phase

a period of reduced sensitivity during which only strong stimulation produces an action potential

31
New cards

Conduction Velocity

the speed of which an action potential is propagated along the length of an axon

32
New cards

Myelin

the fatty insulation around an axon, formed by glial cells; this sheath boosts the speed at which action potentials are conducted

33
New cards

Nodes of Ranvier

a gap between successive segments of the myelin sheath where the axon membrane is exposed

34
New cards

Saltatory Conduction

the form of conduction that is characteristic of myelinated axons, in which the action potential jumps from one node of Ranvier to the next

35
New cards

Multiple Sclerosis (MS)

literally "many scars"; a disorder characterized by the widespread degeneration of myelin

36
New cards

Neurotransmitter

the chemical released from the presynaptic axon terminal that serves as the basis of communications between neurons

37
New cards

Presynaptic

located on the "transmitting" side of a synapse

38
New cards

Postsynaptic

referring to the region of a synapse that receives and responds to a neurotransmitter

39
New cards

Postsynaptic Potential

a local potential that is initiated by stimulation at a synapse, which can vary in amplitude, and spreads passively across the cell membrane, decreasing in strength with time and distance

40
New cards

Excitatory Postsynaptic Potential (EPSP)

a depolarizing potential in the postsynaptic neuron that is normally caused by synaptic excitation; increases the probability that the postsynaptic neuron will fire an action potential

41
New cards

Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potential (IPSP)

a hyperpolarizing potential in the postsynaptic neuron; decreases the probability that the postsynaptic neuron will find an action potential

42
New cards

Chloride Ion (Cl-)

an atom that carries a negative charge

43
New cards

Spatial Summation

the summation of postsynaptic potentials that reach the axon hillock from different locations across the cell body; if this summation reaches threshold, an action potential is fired

44
New cards

Temporal Summation

the summation of postsynaptic potentials that reach the axon hillock at different times; the close in time the potentials occur, the more complete the summation is