Neuroscience Key Concepts: Action Potentials, Neurotransmitters, and Brain Structures

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21 Terms

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Absolute refractory period

During the ________, a neuron cannot produce an action potential.

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Relative refractory period

During the ________, a neuron can produce an action potential, but the excitatory input needs to be stronger than usual.

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Hyperpolarized

There are more negative ions inside the axon than usual when a neuron is in a ______ state.

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Purkinje cell

Which of the following types of neurons has the most dendrites?

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Myelin

Is a white fatty tissue that sometimes surrounds an axon and speeds up the neural signal.

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Oxygen and glucose

The neuron needs ________ to function properly.

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Astrocytes

The _______ is/are not part of the neuron.

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Graded potentials

Some neurons produce ________ potentials that depolarize in proportion to the intensity of the input.

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Dorsal

________ is another way of referring to a superior location of the brain.

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Synapse

The _____ is the small space between a terminal button of one cell and a dendrite of another cell.

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Single axon

A neural impulse traveling over a given distance will do so faster in which of the following situations?

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Temporal summation

Sherrington's (1906) research on the reflex arc in dogs demonstrated temporal summation whereby _______.

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Action potential

The _________ begins as a chemical process that leads to electrical changes.

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Myelinated axons

In ______ axons, the action potential skips across the nodes of Ranvier.

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Ionotropic effects

_______ effects are quicker to initiate and shorter lasting than _______ effects.

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Radial glia

______ are progenitor cells that make new neurons.

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Amphetamine

In class, we discussed how ________ increases dopamine levels in the nucleus accumbens.

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Dopamine

Dopamine _______ levels of GABA in the nucleus accumbens.

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Nucleus accumbens

Olds and Milner (1954)... likely candidate would be the _______.

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GABA

GABA _______.

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