the one with less value!
Memory is the ability to recall information and experiences. Memory and learning are related because in order to be able to remember something it must first be "learned." Memories may be facts or skills. Memory "traces" have been described traditionally as concrete things that are formed during learning and imprinted on the brain when neurons record and store information. However, the way that memories are formed and represented in the brain is not well understood.
Look into the Autonomic Nervous System, ANS. Im pretty sure that's the answer but i would suggest you check it out first, just because i cant remember 100%. However, i do know that the autonomic nervous system has a lot to do with involuntary activity and i believe reflexes is under that category.Hope it helped,- Azad Prestek
The law of specific nerve energies, first proposed by Johannes Peter Müller in 1835, is that the nature of perception is defined by the pathway over which the sensory information is carried. Hence, the origin of the sensation is not important. Therefore the differences in sensory quality, the difference between seeing and hearing, between hearing and touch, and so on - are not caused by differences in the stimuli themselves but by the different nervous structures that these stimuli excite. For example, pressing on the eye elicits sensations of flashes of light because the neurons in the retina send a signal to the occipital lobe. Despite the sensory input's being mechanical, the experience is visual.
There are several idiomatic expressions for this, two of which are "first impression" and "snap judgment." The latter infers that the assessment was unfair or erroneous.
somebody please answer this question.. I've been searching in the net for the answer and nothing popped out. I can't start writing my homework since this is the first one. please help me:))
First order sensory neurons begin in the receptor, travel to dorsal/posterior gray horn of the spinal cord where they synapse with the second order sensory neurons.
Sensory receptors.
connecting neurons
summation
The number 1 is the first number that goes into 5 and 8 equally.
Sebaceous glands are alveolar glands, most of which open into hair follicles. Their secretion is sebum.
Receptor neurons in the nostrils first detect an odor by coming into contact with and reacting to gas molecules of the substance. Then the receptor neurons send information about the odor along the olfactory nerve to the brain.
In developing neurons, dendrites typically begin forming first before the axon. Dendrites receive signals from other neurons and help integrate this information, while the axon transmits signals away from the neuron to other cells.
Functional types of neurons: 1. sensory (afferent) neurons - input to CNS from sensory receptors; dendrites located at receptors, axons in nerves, cell bodies in ganglia outside the CNS 2. motor (efferent) neurons - output from CNS to effectors cell bodies and dendrites located in the CNS, axons in nerves 3. interneurons - communicate and integrate information within the CNS; located entirely within the CNS
1) Neurons get used to each other,like neighbours. For example, the first time yout try to ride a bike the neurons are not used to each other,so you usually fall. After a lot of practice,the neurons start to get use to each other, and the next you you ride your bike you will ride perfectly because of your neurons. sorry i only have one reason........
He loves them all equally.
No, both are liable, equally.