Nervous System
All animals have a nervous system except for sponges
Nerve net
Simplest nervous system
Cnidarians (jellyfish, hydras, anemones)
Neurons connect to each other in a network
Activation of neurons in one area leads to activation of all or most neurons
Echinoderms
Slightly more complicated
Nerve ring around mouth connected to larger radial nerves extending to arms
Mouth and arms operate independently
Planaria
Nerve cords extend length of animal connected by transverse nerves
Collection of neurons in head form cerebral ganglia
Basic integration of sensory input and motor output
Annelids
Same basic structure
More neurons
Ventral nerve cords have ganglia in each segment
Rudimentary brain
Simple mollusks
Similar to annelids
Pair of anterior ganglia
Paired nerve cords
Trend toward cephalization: increasingly complex brain in the head
Insects – Drosophila
Brain has several subdivisions with separate functions
Advanced mollusks
Well- developed brain with subdivisions
Chordates
CNS: brain and nerve cord
Brain and spinal cord in vertebrates
PNS: all neurons that are outside of the CNS
In certain invertebrates with a simple nervous system, the distinction is less clear
Somatic nervous system: primary function to sense external environment and control skeletal muscles
Sensory neurons receive stimuli – heat, vision, smell, taste, hearing, touch – and transmit to CNS
Motor neurons control skeletal muscles
Controls many voluntary responses
Autonomic nervous system: regulates homeostasis and organ function
Predominantly composed of motor neurons
Involuntary – usually cannot be consciously controlled
Sensory neurons detect internal body conditions
Efferent nerves of autonomic nervous system are further divided
Act on same organs with opposing actions
Sympathetic division
Fight-or-flight
Increased heart rate, faster breathing, relaxed airways
Parasympathetic division
Rest-or-digest
Slow heart rate, promote digestion
Medulla oblongata
Coordinates basic reflexes and bodily functions that maintain normal homeostatic processes
Controls heart rate, breathing, cardiovascular function, digestion, swallowing, and vomiting
Cerebellum
Overall function of the cerebellum is to maintain balance and coordinate hand-eye movements
May have significant cognitive functions
Pons
Serves as a relay between the cerebellum and other areas of the brain
Regulates rate and depth of breathing
Processes sensory inputs of several types, including vision, olfaction, and audition
Tracts pass this information to other parts of the brain for further processing and interpretation
Brainstem: medulla oblongata, pons and midbrain
Reticular formation
All three parts of brainstem contain nuclei contributing to the reticular formation
Maintains and controls alertness and sleep
Regulation of respiration and cardiovascular systems
Thalamus
Relays sensory information to the cerebrum
Also sends outputs from the cerebrum to other parts of the brain
Gets input from all sensory systems except olfaction
Hypothalamus
Produces hormones regulating pituitary gland, which regulates hormone secretion from other glands
Great importance for homeostasis of the body and the control of behavior
Epithalamus
Structures with various roles in the production of cerebrospinal fluid, control of food and water intake, and rhythmic and seasonal behaviors
Pineal gland produces melatonin
Cerebral cortex
Surface layer of gray matter on the cerebrum
Contains 10% of neurons in the brain
Integrate information from other nervous system structures and creates outgoing signals
Brain has two halves or hemispheres with four lobes each
Frontal lobe: conscious thought and social awareness
Parietal lobe: receives and interprets sensory input from visual pathways and somatic pathways
Occipital lobe: vision and color recognition
Temporal lobe: language, hearing, and some types of memory
Corpus callosum: connects the cerebral hemispheres
Severing this connection was used in the past to treat severe epilepsy
Hemispheres can function independently
Process different types of information
Left hemisphere: understanding language and producing speech
Right hemisphere: nonverbal memories, recognizing faces. and interpreting emotions
Basal nuclei
Involved in planning, learning, and fine-tuning movements
Complex circuitry to initiate or inhibit movements
Affected in Parkinson disease
People with disease have trouble initiating movement
Limbic system
Include the olfactory bulbs, amygdala, and hippocampus
Primarily involved in formation and expression of emotions
Role in learning, memory, and perception of smells
amygdala – understand and remember emotional situations, recognize emotional expressions in others
hippocampus – establish memories for spatial locations, facts, and sequences of events
Sensory Neurons: detect information from the outside world or internal body conditions
Afferent neurons – transmit to CNS
Motor Neurons: send signals away from CNS (efferent neurons) to elicit response
Interneurons or Association Neurons: form interconnections between other neurons
Stimulus from sensory neurons sent to CNS, little or no interpretation (few or no interneurons), signal transmitted to motor neurons to elicit response
Quick and automatic response
All animals have a nervous system except for sponges
Nerve net
Simplest nervous system
Cnidarians (jellyfish, hydras, anemones)
Neurons connect to each other in a network
Activation of neurons in one area leads to activation of all or most neurons
Echinoderms
Slightly more complicated
Nerve ring around mouth connected to larger radial nerves extending to arms
Mouth and arms operate independently
Planaria
Nerve cords extend length of animal connected by transverse nerves
Collection of neurons in head form cerebral ganglia
Basic integration of sensory input and motor output
Annelids
Same basic structure
More neurons
Ventral nerve cords have ganglia in each segment
Rudimentary brain
Simple mollusks
Similar to annelids
Pair of anterior ganglia
Paired nerve cords
Trend toward cephalization: increasingly complex brain in the head
Insects – Drosophila
Brain has several subdivisions with separate functions
Advanced mollusks
Well- developed brain with subdivisions
Chordates
CNS: brain and nerve cord
Brain and spinal cord in vertebrates
PNS: all neurons that are outside of the CNS
In certain invertebrates with a simple nervous system, the distinction is less clear
Somatic nervous system: primary function to sense external environment and control skeletal muscles
Sensory neurons receive stimuli – heat, vision, smell, taste, hearing, touch – and transmit to CNS
Motor neurons control skeletal muscles
Controls many voluntary responses
Autonomic nervous system: regulates homeostasis and organ function
Predominantly composed of motor neurons
Involuntary – usually cannot be consciously controlled
Sensory neurons detect internal body conditions
Efferent nerves of autonomic nervous system are further divided
Act on same organs with opposing actions
Sympathetic division
Fight-or-flight
Increased heart rate, faster breathing, relaxed airways
Parasympathetic division
Rest-or-digest
Slow heart rate, promote digestion
Medulla oblongata
Coordinates basic reflexes and bodily functions that maintain normal homeostatic processes
Controls heart rate, breathing, cardiovascular function, digestion, swallowing, and vomiting
Cerebellum
Overall function of the cerebellum is to maintain balance and coordinate hand-eye movements
May have significant cognitive functions
Pons
Serves as a relay between the cerebellum and other areas of the brain
Regulates rate and depth of breathing
Processes sensory inputs of several types, including vision, olfaction, and audition
Tracts pass this information to other parts of the brain for further processing and interpretation
Brainstem: medulla oblongata, pons and midbrain
Reticular formation
All three parts of brainstem contain nuclei contributing to the reticular formation
Maintains and controls alertness and sleep
Regulation of respiration and cardiovascular systems
Thalamus
Relays sensory information to the cerebrum
Also sends outputs from the cerebrum to other parts of the brain
Gets input from all sensory systems except olfaction
Hypothalamus
Produces hormones regulating pituitary gland, which regulates hormone secretion from other glands
Great importance for homeostasis of the body and the control of behavior
Epithalamus
Structures with various roles in the production of cerebrospinal fluid, control of food and water intake, and rhythmic and seasonal behaviors
Pineal gland produces melatonin
Cerebral cortex
Surface layer of gray matter on the cerebrum
Contains 10% of neurons in the brain
Integrate information from other nervous system structures and creates outgoing signals
Brain has two halves or hemispheres with four lobes each
Frontal lobe: conscious thought and social awareness
Parietal lobe: receives and interprets sensory input from visual pathways and somatic pathways
Occipital lobe: vision and color recognition
Temporal lobe: language, hearing, and some types of memory
Corpus callosum: connects the cerebral hemispheres
Severing this connection was used in the past to treat severe epilepsy
Hemispheres can function independently
Process different types of information
Left hemisphere: understanding language and producing speech
Right hemisphere: nonverbal memories, recognizing faces. and interpreting emotions
Basal nuclei
Involved in planning, learning, and fine-tuning movements
Complex circuitry to initiate or inhibit movements
Affected in Parkinson disease
People with disease have trouble initiating movement
Limbic system
Include the olfactory bulbs, amygdala, and hippocampus
Primarily involved in formation and expression of emotions
Role in learning, memory, and perception of smells
amygdala – understand and remember emotional situations, recognize emotional expressions in others
hippocampus – establish memories for spatial locations, facts, and sequences of events
Sensory Neurons: detect information from the outside world or internal body conditions
Afferent neurons – transmit to CNS
Motor Neurons: send signals away from CNS (efferent neurons) to elicit response
Interneurons or Association Neurons: form interconnections between other neurons
Stimulus from sensory neurons sent to CNS, little or no interpretation (few or no interneurons), signal transmitted to motor neurons to elicit response
Quick and automatic response