Along a nerve cell, the impulse travels from the axon to the dendrites and then again to the axons through the synapse.
A nerve impulse can travel toward a nerve cell or away from a nerve cell. Different nerves are specialized to either send or receive impulses.
From point D --> B --> A
Body to axons
dendrites to body
They ALWAYS go down.
This means that the flow of a nerve impulse will travel only in one direction.
4
They are called as motor neurons. They are same like sensory neurons. Only difference the direction of the nerve impulse. The nerve impulse travel from dendrites to body to axon to axon terminals.
100 meters per second
A nerve impulse travels toward the actual nucleus itself to pass information.
when the nerve was reversed in position, was the impulse conducted in the opposite direction
it allows the electrical impulse to travel more easily :)
Nerve impulses travel up through nerves, into the spinal cord and into one of the different lobes of the brain depending on where the impulse comes from. For example, if the impulse comes from your ear, the impulse would travel to the temporal lobe.
nerve impulse
It 200 miles per hour And it can probally be in meters too.
A test that measures the time it takes a nerve impulse to travel a specific distance over the nerve after electronic stimulation.
Nerve impulses travel up through nerves, into the spinal cord and into one of the different lobes of the brain depending on where the impulse comes from. For example, if the impulse comes from your ear, the impulse would travel to the temporal lobe.