No.The skull is the structure in your head that protects your brain. Your skull is a bone, and bones are part of the Skeletal System. The Skeletal System is made up of all the bones in your body, and it helps your body move, it protects your vital organs, and it gives you form so you are not a blob of body tissue.
Your nervous systems is made up of the brain, spinal cord, and the network of nerves throughout your body.
the ear
The central nervous system has two organs, the brain and the spinal cord.
It is the central nervous system
the main function of the peripheral is to connect the centeral nervous system with limbs and organs.
Gas exchange.
I think you mean the 'Autonomic' nervous system. It is responsible for regulating internal organs, among other things.
Brain and spinal cord compose the central nervous system (CNS).All the nerves that innervate everything outside of your CNS is your peripheral nervous system (PNS).
No, nervous tissue does not support body organs. Nervous tissue primarily functions in communication through electrical and chemical signals within the nervous system. The support and structure of body organs are primarily provided by other types of tissues such as connective tissue.
There are organs within any system but no systems within an other system. The nervous systems has the brain, the mid brain, the hind brain, the cord and the nerves.
The nervous system generally begins to develop first in an embryo, followed by the formation of other systems such as the cardiovascular and musculoskeletal systems. The development of the nervous system is crucial for coordinating the growth and function of other organs and systems in the body.
brain stem
Yes, the nervous system shares the brain with the endocrine system, as the hypothalamus controls the release of hormones from the pituitary gland. Additionally, the nervous system interacts with the muscular system to control movement.