to provide a counter stimulus to neurons
to transmit a negative feedback impulse
to maintain homeostasis
to decrease the external stimulus
They are effectors as they bring about a response.
A Receptor is referring to a sense organ, like a nerve ending. An Effector is referring to a muscle capable of reflecting to a stimulus. By definition, receptor and effector are antonyms.
The nervous system comprises the body's total response mechanism. It receives external information, sends that info to the brain for processing, and sends messages from the brain about appropriate response to the effector muscles and glands.
effector
Effector part = globus pallidusSensory part (or the receptor nuclei) = caudate nucleus + putamen
Effector response is the phenomenon that occurs after the immune system recognizes a foreign organism. A variety of cells and molecules are then recruited to mount an appropriate response to eliminate or neutralize the organism.
effector
The effector such as a muscle or gland brings about response in the nervous system.
to provide a counter stimulus to neurons i hope this helped ^^
Memory cells live longer than effector cells and are responsible for the secondary immune response
Motor neurons are able to create a response in effector organs, muscles and glands by sending signals to them.
to the brain, then to the effector through the motor neuron
They are effectors as they bring about a response.
In biology, an effector is an organ that reacts to the external stimuli on receiving signals from the central nervous system. An example is when the adrenal gland secretes adrenaline in response to stress or danger.
A reflex action is a fast, automatic response to a stimulus by an effector organ i.e. a muscle.
in homeostasis an antagonistic effector is what brings about the response to the change in environment in order to keep your internal environment the same. for exampe if the core body temperature is too low the antagonistic effector is what increases your body temperature.
stimulus, receptor, afferent pathway, control center, efferent pathway, effector, response