Zusammenfassung der Ressource
14. Coordination and
response
- 14.1 Nervous control in humans
- describe a nerve impulse
Anmerkungen:
- as an electrical signal that passes along nerve cells called neurones
- describe the human nervous system
Anmerkungen:
- in terms of:
- the central nervous system consisting of brain and spinal cord
- the peripheral nervous system
- coordination and regulation of body functions
- distinguish between voluntary
and involuntary actions
- identify ... neurones from diagrams
- motor (effector)
- relay (connector)
- sensory
- describe a simple reflex arc
Anmerkungen:
- in terms of receptor, sensory neurone, relay neurone, motor neurones and effector
- describe a simple reflex action
Anmerkungen:
- as a means of automatically and rapidly integrating and coordinating stimuli with the responses of effectors (muscles and glands)
- define a synapse
Anmerkungen:
- as a junction between two neurones
- describe the structure
of a synapse
Anmerkungen:
- including the presence of neurotransmitter vesicles, the synaptic cleft and neurotransmitter receptor molecules
- describe how an impulse
triggers the release of a
neurotransmitter
Anmerkungen:
- from vesicles into the synaptic gap and how the neurotransmitter diffuses across to bind with receptor molecules, in the membrane of the neurone after the synaptic gap, causing the impulse to continue
- state that in a reflex arc the
synapses ensure that
impulses travel in one
direction only
- state that many drugs, e.g. heroin, act upon synapses
- 14.2 Sense organs
- define sense organs
Anmerkungen:
- as groups of receptor cells responding to specific stimuli: light, sound, touch, temperature and chemicals
- identify the structures of the eye
Anmerkungen:
- limited to cornea, iris, pupil, lens, retina, optic nerve and blind spot
- describe the function of each part of the eye
- cornea
Anmerkungen:
- iris
Anmerkungen:
- controls how much light enters pupil
- explain the pupil reflex
Anmerkungen:
- in terms of light intensity and pupil diameter, and antagonistic action of circular and radial muscles in the iris
- lens
Anmerkungen:
- focuses light onto retina
- explain accommodation to view near
and distant objects
Anmerkungen:
- in terms of the contraction and relaxation of the ciliary muscles, tension in the suspensory ligaments, shape of the lens and refraction of light
- retina
Anmerkungen:
- contains light receptors, some sensitive to light of different colours
- state the distribution of rods and cones
Anmerkungen:
- outline the function of rods and cones
Anmerkungen:
- limited to greater sensitivity of rods for night vision and three different kinds of cones absorbing light of different colours for colour vision
- optic nerve
Anmerkungen:
- carries impulses to the brain
- identify the position of the fovea
- 14.3 Hormones in humans
- define a hormone
Anmerkungen:
- as a chemical substance produced by a gland and carried by the blood, which alters the activity of one or more specific target organs
- identify specific endocrine glands and their secretions
Anmerkungen:
- limited to:
-adrenal glands and adrenaline
-pancreas and insulin
-testes and testosterone
-ovaries and oestrogen
- describe adrenaline as the
hormone secreted in 'fight or flight'
situations and its effects
Anmerkungen:
- limited to increased breathing and pulse rate and widened pupils
- discuss the role of the hormone adrenaline
Anmerkungen:
- in the chemical control of metabolic activity, including increasing the blood glucose concentration and pulse rate
- give examples of situations in which adrenaline secretion increases
- compare nervous and hormonal control systems
Anmerkungen:
- in terms of speed and longevity of action
- state the functions of ...
- insulin
- oestrogen
- testosterone
- 14.4 Homeostasis
- define homeostasis
Anmerkungen:
- as the maintenance of a constant internal environment
- explain that homeostasis is the control of
internal conditions within set limits
- explain the concept of control by negative feedback
- describe the control of the glucose concentration of the blood
Anmerkungen:
- by the liver and the roles of insulin and glucagon from the pancreas
- outline the symptoms and treatment of Type 1 diabetes
Anmerkungen:
- details of B cells is NOT required
- name and identify on a diagram of the skin:
- hairs
- hair erector muscles
- sweat glands
- receptors
- sensory neurones
- blood vessels
- fatty tissue
- describe the maintenance of a constant internal body temperature in humans
Anmerkungen:
- in terms of insulation, seating, shivering, vasodilation and vasoconstriction of arterioles supplying skin surface capillaries and the role of the brain (limited to blood temperature receptors and coordination)
- 14.5 Tropic responses
- define gravitropism
Anmerkungen:
- as a response in which parts of a plant grow towards or away from gravity
- define phototropism
Anmerkungen:
- as a response in which parts of a plant grow towards or away from the direction from which light is coming
- explain phototropism and gravitropism of a shoot
Anmerkungen:
- as examples of the chemical control of plant growth
- investigate gravitropism and phototropism in shoots and roots
- explain the role of auxin in controlling shoot growth
Anmerkungen:
- limited to:
- auxin made in shoot tip (only)
- auxin spreads through the plant from the shoot tip
- auxin is unequally distributed in response to light and gravity
- auxin stimulates cell elongation
- describe the use in
weedkillers of the synthetic
plant hormone 2,4 -D
- other info and terms
- central nervous system
- brain
- spinal cord
- peripheral nervous system
- cranial nerves
- spinal nerves