Human Nervous System (Edexcel IGCSE Science (Double Award)): Revision Note
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The Human Nervous System: Structure
The human nervous system consists of:
Central nervous system (CNS) – the brain and spinal cord
Peripheral nervous system (PNS) – all of the nerves in the body
Information is sent through the nervous system as electrical impulses – these are electrical signals that pass along nerve cells known as neurones
A bundle of neurones is known as a nerve
The nerves spread out from the central nervous system to all other regions of the body and importantly, to all of the sense organs
The CNS, therefore, acts as a central coordinating centre for the impulses that come in from (or are sent out to) any part of the body
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The human nervous system is comprised of the CNS and the PNS
The Human Nervous System: Function
The pathway through the nervous system can be summarised as follows:
stimulus → sensory neurone → relay neurone → motor neurone → effector → response
A stimulus is received by a sensory (receptor) neurone
Most receptors are specialised to detect particular stimuli
When a receptor is stimulated, it produces electrical impulses
These impulses then travel along a sensory neurone to the central nervous system (the coordinator is either the brain or the spinal cord)
In the CNS, the impulses are passed on to a relay neurone
The relay neurone links to a motor neurone, along which the impulses travel until they reach the effector
The effector is what carries out the response (the effector may be a muscle or gland)
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From stimulus to response: an example of a nerve pathway showing how an electrical impulse travels through sensory, relay and motor neurones
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