axons
Efferent Neuron
Synapses. Net flow of charged ions ("impulses") in neuronal cells trigger additional ion flow (ionotropic signaling) or neurotransmitter release (metabotropic signaling) to both neuronal and non-neuronal cell types ("the body") at junctions called synapses.
The olfactory nerve, also known as cranial nerve I, conducts impulses from the nose to the olfactory bulbs in the brain. It is responsible for the sense of smell.
An axon will carry nerve impulses away from the cell body.
nerve impulses
vagus nerve
conducts electrical impulses away from the neuron's cell body or soma. It is basically what the nerve impulse travels along.
The parts of a multipolar neuron include the dendrites which receive nerve impulses, the cell body which integrates the signals, and the axon which conducts the signals away from the cell body. In terms of receiving nerve impulses, the order is generally dendrites, cell body, and then axon.
The axon of a neuron conducts electrical impulses away from the cell body. This is easy to remember because axon starts with an "a" for away.
nerve impulses
They transmit nerve impulses and stimuli.
Neuron