Yes.
Dendrites receive signals in the nervous system.
They belong to the nervous system
Neurons, of the nervous system. The dendrites receive impulses, and the axons send them to another neuron or an effector cell.
dendrites and axons
Nerves and nervous system.
The branching fiber that is the first part of the neuron to receive a nervous system impulse is called a dendrite. Dendrites receive signals from other neurons or sensory receptors and transmit these signals to the cell body of the neuron. They play a crucial role in receiving and integrating incoming information in the nervous system.
Nerve
From the dendrites and axon.
Axons and dendrites are found in nerve cells, which are part of the nervous tissue. Nerve cells, or neurons, are responsible for transmitting electrical and chemical signals throughout the body to facilitate communication between different parts of the nervous system.
Yes, dendrites are extensions of nerve cells that receive signals from other nerve cells. Sensory neurons, which carry sensory information from the peripheral nervous system to the central nervous system, have dendrites that receive stimuli from the environment and transmit them as electrical impulses to the cell body.
Axons and dendrites are part of neurons. Axons relay signals away from the cell body, while dendrites receive signals from other neurons. Together, they help transmit information throughout the nervous system.
I'm assuming you're talking about dendrites... And the dendrites are what receive signals on a neuron. Signals are delivered through the axon to the axon terminal, which passes the signal to another neuron's dendrites.