Immunity provides protection against specific foreign antigens, displays memory, and it requires distinction between self and non self antigen.
A stimulus is a change in an organism's surroundings or body which causes it to respond. Hence, a response is an organism's reaction to a specific stimulus.
Fever
A response is a reaction or behavior of an organism to a stimulus in its environment, while a tropism is a specific growth response of a plant to a stimulus, such as light or gravity. Responses are more generalized and can involve various reactions, while tropisms are specific and directed growth movements.
Specific immunity follows a non-specific response. The major difference between specific and non-specific is the ability to remember pathogenic antigens. Specific immunity results in the production of memory cells which upon reinfection are used to effectivly remove the pathogen Non-specific cannot do this
Response is short term, adaptation is long
A stimulus is an external event or cue that triggers a reaction in an organism, while a response is the specific reaction or behavior that follows the presentation of a stimulus. In simpler terms, a stimulus is something that causes a response.
In an experiment, a positive control is used to show that the experiment can detect a specific response, while a negative control is used to show that the experiment does not detect a response when it should not.
Nonspecific like the skin, mucous membranes, tears, mucus and the inflammatory response... are designed with and acidic surface that, for the most part, repels bacteria and are attributable to factors other than specific antibodies. They are often called innate immunities. Specific immunity has to do with how our lymphocytes (specialized white blood cells, such as B and T Cells) that can remember a specific virus or bacteria, and the next time it shows up, there's a whole welcoming party ready with lots of demolition gear to destroy the unwelcome guests.
Approximately 2 ms.
it's nothing
p3nis
An unconditioned response is automatic and unlearned, triggered by a specific stimulus. A conditioned response, on the other hand, is learned through association with a neutral stimulus that was previously paired with an unconditioned stimulus.