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  • Nervous system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    The nervous system is a highly specialized tissue network. Nervous systems are found in many multicellular animals but differ greatly in complexity between species.

  • the nervous system

    An overview of nerve systems, impulse transmission, neurotransmitters, the brain, and the rest of the nervous system.

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    Nervous System-Nervous System Pictures-The sciatic nerves are branches of the lumbar nerves and are the largest and longest nerves in the body. They descend into the buttock and ...

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Nervous System

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Nervous System OrganizationNervous System Organization
Article Outline
I

Introduction

Nervous System, those elements within the animal organism that are concerned with the reception of stimuli, the transmission of nerve impulses, or the activation of muscle mechanisms.

II

Anatomy and Function

The reception of stimuli is the function of special sensory cells. The conducting elements of the nervous system are cells called neurons; these may be capable of only slow and generalized activity, or they may be highly efficient and rapidly conducting units. The specific response of the neuron—the nerve impulse—and the capacity of the cell to be stimulated make this cell a receiving and transmitting unit capable of transferring information from one part of the body to another.

A

Nerve Cell

Each nerve cell consists of a central portion containing the nucleus, known as the cell body, and one or more structures referred to as axons and dendrites. The dendrites are rather short extensions of the cell body and are involved in the reception of stimuli. The axon, by contrast, is usually a single elongated extension; it is especially important in the transmission of nerve impulses from the region of the cell body to other cells. See Neurophysiology.

B

Simple Systems

Although all many-celled animals have some kind of nervous system, the complexity of its organization varies considerably among different animal types. In simple animals such as jellyfish, the nerve cells form a network capable of mediating only a relatively stereotyped response. In more complex animals, such as shellfish, insects, and spiders, the nervous system is more complicated. The cell bodies of neurons are organized in clusters called ganglia. These clusters are interconnected by the neuronal processes to form a ganglionated chain. Such chains are found in all vertebrates, in which they represent a special part of the nervous system, related especially to the regulation of the activities of the heart, the glands, and the involuntary muscles.



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