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Cells of the nervous system, neurotransmitters at synapsesExcitatory and inhibitory signals

Your brain contains billions of neurons. They are the cells in the brain that transmit and receive signals to enable processes such as thought. These signals are transmitted across junctions called synapses by neurotransmitters.

Part of Human BiologyNeurobiology and immunology

Excitatory and inhibitory signals

Receptors on the postsynaptic membrane determines whether the signal received is:

  • excitatory - increases contraction of muscle fibres
  • inhibitory - decreases contraction of muscle fibres

Stimuli threshold

A critical number of molecules is needed in order to affect enough receptors on the postsynaptic membrane.

A nerve impulse is only transmitted across the if enough neurotransmitter is released. Weak stimuli don't reach this critical number. As a result, not enough neurotransmitter reaches the postsynaptic neuron to generate an impulse. This filters out weak stimuli.

However, a series of weak stimuli can combine, increasing the amount of neurotransmitter that is released. This results in enough neurotransmitter being diffused across the synaptic cleft to trigger the impulse in the postsynaptic neuron. This process is called summation.

Diagram explaining stimuli thresholds