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        | Cranial nerves, ganglia, spinal nerves |  | 
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        | Sensory Carries info away from the body to the CNS |  | 
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        | also known as a nerve cell sends and recieves info to and from another nerve cell, muscle or gland |  | 
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        | do not send or recieve impulses directly but provide supportive functions to neurons |  | 
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        | most common motor neuron interneuron extensive dendrite branches |  | 
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        | sensory neurons one process   |  | 
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        | Interneuron facilitates communication between sensory and motor |  | 
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        | cluster of cell bodies in the PNS |  | 
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        | clusters of cell bodies in the CNS (gray matter) |  | 
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        | bundle of axons in the CNS |  | 
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        | bundle of axons in the CNS smaller than a tract |  | 
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        | bundle of axons in the PNS cranial and spinal nerves |  | 
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        | Pillar of fibers in the spinal cord |  | 
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        | a change in voltage in response to an adequate stimulus that results in either depolarization or hyperpolarization |  | 
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        | carry info that produces an excitatory or inhibitory response |  | 
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        | excitatory inside the cells becomes more positive |  | 
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        | inhibitatory inside the cell becomes more negative |  | 
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        | spread of info from one neuron or neuronal pool to many others parallel processing |  | 
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        | several neurons transmitting info to one post-synaptic neuron |  | 
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        | many responses happen simultaneously divergent process |  | 
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        | process happens in a sequential, step-by-step nature |  | 
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        | Glutamate Neurotransmitter |  | Definition 
 
        | most abundant excitatory   important in learning and memory   abnormal activity can produce seizures |  | 
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        | most abunadant inhibitory   important in motor and vision and plays a role in emotion regulation (anxiety) |  | 
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        | Acetylcholine Neurotransmitter |  | Definition 
 
        | inhibitory or excitatory   abundant in the PNS   common at neuromuscular junctions   Myasthenia gravis and Alzheimers |  | 
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        | Norepinephrine Neurotransmitter |  | Definition 
 
        | mainly excitatory (can be inhibitory)   involved in attention, vigilance, readiness   tend to find low levels in stroke patients   |  | 
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        | Serotonin Neurostransmitter |  | Definition 
 
        | inhibitory   lack of serotonin related to decreased attention, chronic depression, mood changes   also relates to regulation of body temp, mood, appetite, pain |  | 
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        | Dopamine Neurotransmitter |  | Definition 
 
        | can be inhibitory or excititory   Parkinsons Disease, decreased production of dopamine   imbalances related to schizophrenia, ADHD   cocaine increases dopamine production |  | 
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        | form and maintain the myelin sheath |  | 
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        | provide the structure and support around the cell bodies   support neural plasticity and the brain's adaptation after injury |  | 
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        | line the ventricles of the brain and spinal cord   specialized types are from the choroid plexus - manufactures cerebrospinal fluid |  | 
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        | scavenger function   clenaing debris after neural cell damage |  | 
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        | form and maintain the myelin sheath for nerves and nerve roots |  | 
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        | surround neuron bodies but their function is unknown |  | 
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        | 44 & 45   made up of pars triangularis and pars opercularis   speech production   movement and planning  |  | 
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        | 22   speech comprehension and hearing |  | 
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        | Primary Somatosensory Area |  | Definition 
 
        | 1, 2, 3   sensory strip   post-central gyrus   recieves impulses from the Thalamus   recieves feedback from skin, muscles, tendons and joints |  | 
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        | 4   motor strip   pre-central gyrus     |  | 
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        | 6    Supplement to the primary projection cortex 
 Relates to extrapyramidal division of the motor system (involuntary movements)     
 
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        | Supplementary/Secondary Motor Area (SMA) |  | Definition 
 
        | 6   ventral   control of sequential movements   intiation of speech |  | 
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        | Heshcl's Gyrus   41    Found in each of the temporal lobes  
 Larger in the left hemisphere, may be due to language dominance            |  | 
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        | 17   Striate Area 
  Occipital Lobes – along the calcarine fissure  
  Receives information from the optic tract  
 Damage causes various degrees of blindness    |  | 
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        | 28    Receives information from the olfactory tract that ends in the olfactory bulbs  
  Deep in the temporal lobe  
  Includes the uncus and nearby portions of the parahippocampal gyri   |  | 
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        | Unimodal Association Area |  | Definition 
 
        | adjacent to primary motor and sensory area   only one type of info is processed |  | 
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        | Polymodal Association Area |  | Definition 
 
        | close to unimodal areas   process two or more sensory modalities (vision and hearing)   matches past and present sensory info |  | 
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        | Supramodal Association Area |  | Definition 
 
        | highest level of processing   areas not directly linked to motor or sensory functions |  | 
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        |  connect an area in one hemisphere with an area in the opposite hemisphere   |  | 
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        |  largest set of commissural fibers in the brain   |  | 
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        |  connects the olfactory bulbs, amygdaloid nuclei (amygdala nucleus in each hemisphere), and the medial and inferior temporal lobes    |  | 
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        |  connect areas in the occipital lobes (areas for eye movement and control)   |  | 
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        | Connect areas within the lobes  |  | 
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        |   Connect areas between lobes    |  | 
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        |   connects Wernicke’s area in the temporal lobe to Broca’s area in the frontal lobe    |  | 
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        |  Superior Longitudinal fasciculus   |  | Definition 
 
        |  Longer, more broad reaching set of fibers that connects areas in the posterior of temporal lobe to the pre and association motor areas in the frontal lobe    |  | 
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        |   long axons of neurons that send impulses to a distant structure in the brain and the spinal cord    |  | 
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        | Intraparietal Sulcus (IPS) |  | Definition 
 
        | spatial processing   visual processing   some relation to language perception     |  | 
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        | Parts of the Corpus Callosum |  | Definition 
 
        | Rostrum > genu > trunk > splenium |  | 
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        | related to memory   part of Limbic system |  | 
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        | related to emotions   part of the Limbic system   |  | 
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        | Primary Motor Projection Areas |  | Definition 
 
        | Primary Motor Projection Cortex (4)   Pre-Motor Cortex (6)   Supplementary Motor Area (SMA) (6) |  | 
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        | Primary Sensory Reception Areas |  | Definition 
 
        | Primary Somatosensory Cortex (1, 2, 3)   Primary Auditory Cortex (41) - Heschl's   Primary Visual Cortex (17)   Primary Olfactory Cortex (28) |  | 
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