BIO 203 Study Guide - Final Guide: Negative Feedback, Hamstring, Glossary Of Partner Dance Terms

65 views12 pages

Document Summary

Sensory signal comes from periphery that will activate sensory receptors that will send information to the cerebellum. Spinal cord also can act as a relay to send information to the brain stem which can go to other areas above. The sensory side of both side are the same: stimulus activates a sensory receptor that activates a sensory neuron that sends signal to spinal cord. What differentiates between the two is what happens once the action potential gets into the cns. In monosynaptic reflex, the sensory neuron synapses directly onto a alpha-motor neuron and the monosynaptic reflex is always excitatory. In polysynaptic reflex, same with information going into spinal cord, and the signal synapses onto interneuron which then synapses onto efferent motor neuron or onto another interneuron. The first synapse is always excitatory but the second might be excitatory (glutamate) or inhibitory (gaba or glycine). Monosynaptic always excitation while polysynaptic can be either.

Get access

Grade+
$40 USD/m
Billed monthly
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
10 Verified Answers

Related textbook solutions

Related Documents

Related Questions