Coordination and control - The nervous system - AQA Reflex arc
The nervous system enables humans to react to their surroundings and to coordinate their behaviour. It comprises millions of neurones and uses electrical impulses to communicate very quickly.
There are different types of neurones that work together in a reflex actionAutomatic and rapid response to a stimulus. .
This creates an automatic and rapid response to a stimulus, which minimises any damage to the body from potentially harmful conditions, such as touching something hot.
A reflex action follows this general sequence and does not involve the conscious part of the brain, which makes it much quicker.
The nerve pathway followed by a reflex action is called a reflex arcThe pathway of information from a sensory neuron through an inter neuron to a motor neuron.. For example, a simple reflex arc happens if we accidentally touch something hot.
Receptor in the skin detects a stimulus (the change in temperature).
Sensory neurone sends electrical impulses to relay neurone, which are located in the spinal cord. They connect sensory neurones to motor neurones.
Motor neurone sends electrical impulses to an effector.
Effector produces a response (muscle contracts to move hand away).
Where two neurones meet there is a small gap, a synapseA tiny gap at the junction between two nerve cells, which nerve signals must cross..
An electrical impulse travels along the first axon.
This triggers the nerve-ending of a neurone to release chemical messengers called neurotransmitterChemical involved in passing nerve impulses from one nerve cell to the next across a synapse..
These chemicals diffuse across the synapse (the gap) and bind with receptor molecules on the membrane of the second neurone.
The receptor molecules on the second neurone bind only to the specificneurotransmitters released from the first neurone. This stimulates the second neurone to transmit the electrical impulse.