butter a banana and put it in ur bum
i think they belong to the peripheral nervous system (pns)
It's make less likely for nerves to send messages.
The function is to catch/take impulses from the central nervous system and send it to muscles and glands
Organs and parts of your body send information to the central nervous system (that's your brain and spinal cord) by electrical impulses. When the impulses reach the central nervous system, a response is triggered. For example, if you touch a hot object, receptors on your skin will trigger an action potential in nerve cells. This action potential will be passed on to the next cell and so on until it reaches the central nervous system. The triggering of action potentials is what causes the electrical impulse. The central nervous system will then send impulses back to your hand via a motor nerve and will cause you to automatically pull your hand away.
The peripheral nervous system contains all the nerves in the body that lie outside of the spinal cord and brain.They communicate with the central nervous system to make sure our body parts, such as our fingers, can send signals to the central nervous system for processing in our brains.
The function is to catch/take impulses from the central nervous system and send it to muscles and glands
The motor neurons of the peripheral nervous system send signals from the central nervous system to the muscles, causing them to contract and move. These signals are transmitted through neurotransmitters released at the neuromuscular junction.
impulses travel to and from the central nervous system allowing the brain and spinal cord to control all your other body systems
The three types of neurons are sensory(afferant) neurons, interneurons, and motor(efferant) neurons. Sensory, or afferent, neurons send information from the receptor to the central nervouse system. Interneurons, found only in the central nervous system, play the role of interpretting the impulse. The motor, or efferent, neurons send the information from the central nervous system to the effector. Receptor->sensory neuron->interneuron->motor neuron->effector.
Stretch receptors in the bladder wall send signals to the central nervous system when the bladder is full. These receptors detect the stretching of the bladder as it fills up with urine, triggering the sensation of needing to urinate.
Sensory receptors throughout the body detect stimuli such as touch, pain, temperature, and sound. These receptors then send signals along sensory neurons to the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) for processing and response.
The human nervous system allows us to experience pain. When our body detects potential harm or injury, specialized nerve receptors called nociceptors send signals to the brain, which interprets these signals as pain.