The three major components include the sensor, the integrator, and the effector. For example: if you place your hand near a hot flame, your skin senses the heat and signals the brain which integrates the incoming info and sends a message to the muscles, the effector, to pull away from the flame.
signal, sensor, stimulus, effector
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.
effector
Effector part = globus pallidusSensory part (or the receptor nuclei) = caudate nucleus + putamen
Sensory (receptor), motor (effector), and intermediate (relay) nuerones. They have functions of transmitting impulses to nerve cells, from nerve cells to effector muscles, and from one nerve cell to another respectively.
Humoral Stimuli, Neural Stimuli, Hormonal Stimuli
The three major components include the sensor, the integrator, and the effector. For example: if you place your hand near a hot flame, your skin senses the heat and signals the brain which integrates the incoming info and sends a message to the muscles, the effector, to pull away from the flame.
Three examples of visceral effector organs would be the heart, kidney and liver organs. Effector organs are considered to be muscle and glands, like the mouth and stomach.
sensor, intergrator and effector
signal, sensor, stimulus, effector
Neural
The brain is not an effector. An effector refers to the glands and muscles doing activity.
Effector - album - was created in 1999.
An effector is at the end of a reflex arc as it is the muscle or gland that 'does' the reflex. What the effector does is the outcome of the reflex arc.
Ectoderm is responsible for the formation of neural tissue. It is one of the three main layers of germ cells in the early stages of embryonic development.
The effector muscle is the biceps brachii.