Final Exam Review --> Exam is on December 21st

Descrição

Zoology Quiz sobre Final Exam Review --> Exam is on December 21st, criado por Manisha BHARADIA em 30-11-2016.
Manisha BHARADIA
Quiz por Manisha BHARADIA, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Manisha BHARADIA
Criado por Manisha BHARADIA aproximadamente 8 anos atrás
15
1

Resumo de Recurso

Questão 1

Questão
Match the developmental stages of the eye to their functionality: Rudimentary: small patch of photosensitive cells; [blank_start]only for presence of light[blank_end] [blank_start]Invagination of patch[blank_end]: limited directional sensitivity Pinhole Eye: forces light to fall on a very small area; [blank_start]direction and imaging[blank_end] Fluid-Filled: introduced [blank_start]diffraction and lens to refine travel[blank_end] Modern Eye: another fluid filled chamber, [blank_start]separate cornea and iris[blank_end]
Responda
  • only for presence of light
  • Invagination of patch
  • direction and imaging
  • diffraction and lens to refine travel
  • separate cornea and iris

Questão 2

Questão
Which gene, related to the eyes, seems to be conserved amongst species?
Responda
  • SIXP
  • PAX6
  • HEG7
  • EYE1

Questão 3

Questão
Label the Compound Eye.
Responda
  • Cornea
  • The Ommatidium
  • Psuedocone
  • Support Cells
  • Retinular Cells
  • Rhabdomeres

Questão 4

Questão
Match the components of the compound eye with its purpose: Cornea: [blank_start]focuses light into central aspect[blank_end] [blank_start]Ommatidium[blank_end]: the single visual transduction unit that makes up the compound eye [blank_start]Support Cells[blank_end]: continue to focus light into the central portion of the cell Retinular Cells: [blank_start]transfer information to the rhabdomeres[blank_end] [blank_start]Rhabdomeres[blank_end]: inside of the retinular cells, send signals down to axon Rhabdomeres: [blank_start]made of microvilli, full of action[blank_end] [blank_start]Membrane of the Rhabdomeres[blank_end]: contain lots of photopigments (Rhodopsin)
Responda
  • focuses light into central aspect
  • Ommatidium
  • Support Cells
  • transfer information to the rhabdomeres
  • Rhabdomeres
  • made of microvilli, full of action
  • Membrane of the Rhabdomeres

Questão 5

Questão
Why do Rhabdomeres have so many microvilli?
Responda
  • To help it move around for better signal transduction
  • To help it contact the Retinular cells
  • To increase SA and the amount of Rhodopsin that can be contained on the membrane

Questão 6

Questão
What is the 2nd messenger cascade for Rhodopsin receptors?
Responda
  • G protein --> IP3/PKC --> activate TRP cation channel
  • G protein --> Rab 2 --> activate TRP cation channel
  • G protein --> IP3/PKC --> Ca2+ release from SER

Questão 7

Questão
The vertebrate eye differs from the compound eye in that the vertebrate eye has the ability to focus light, giving it more acuity.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 8

Questão
What does the fluid filled portion of the eye introduce?
Responda
  • Diffraction
  • Reflection
  • Refraction
  • Squishy Stuff

Questão 9

Questão
[blank_start]Convex[blank_end] lenses cause light to converge while [blank_start]concave[blank_end] lenses cause light to diverge. This is caused by [blank_start]refraction[blank_end].
Responda
  • Convex
  • Concave
  • concave
  • convex
  • refraction
  • diffraction
  • reflection

Questão 10

Questão
Striated Muscle is:
Responda
  • Found in the heart
  • Found in Skeletal Muscle
  • Voluntary
  • Involuntary
  • Have well defined sarcomeres
  • Single Unit
  • Multi-Unit

Questão 11

Questão
The smallest unit of skeletal muscle is called a myoblast
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 12

Questão
Identify the correct order for the creation of a multinucleated muscle cell
Responda
  • Myoblast, myotubule, myocyte
  • Myocyte, myotubule, myoblast
  • Myotubule, myocyte, myoblast
  • myotubule, myoblast, myocyte

Questão 13

Questão
What makes a muscle striated?
Responda
  • Myotubules
  • Myofibrils
  • Sarcomeres, contained in myofibrils
  • myocytes

Questão 14

Questão
Thick filaments are made of [blank_start]myosin[blank_end] and thin filaments are made of [blank_start]actin[blank_end].
Responda
  • myosin
  • actin

Questão 15

Questão
Label the lines and bands on the sarcomere below:
Responda
  • Z-Disk
  • H-Zone
  • M-Line (Myosin)
  • Actin
  • I-Band
  • A-Band

Questão 16

Questão
In the sarcomere, [blank_start]titin[blank_end] asociates with myosin and [blank_start]nebulin[blank_end] associates with actin.
Responda
  • titin
  • nebulin

Questão 17

Questão
Label the electromicrograph with the location of: 1) The A band 2) The I band 3) The H Band 4) How these components interact with light (put this on top of the location) --> only for A and I
Responda
  • H-Zone
  • A-band
  • I-Band
  • ISOTROPIC (does not polarize light)
  • ANISTROPIC (polarizes light)

Questão 18

Questão
What is the thin:thick ratio of filaments in mammal skeltal muscle?
Responda
  • 1:2
  • 2:1
  • 1:3
  • 3:1

Questão 19

Questão
Myosin is made up of:
Responda
  • 2 heavy chains and 4 light chains
  • 4 heavy chains and 2 light chains
  • 1 heavy chain and 3 light chain
  • 3 heavy chains and 1 light chain

Questão 20

Questão
The myosin heavy chain is made up of ______________ and the myosin light chains are made up of ________________.
Responda
  • tail, head, neck AND essential and regulatory units
  • head AND tail
  • neck AND head and tail
  • essential and regulatory units AND tail, head, neck

Questão 21

Questão
What two binding sites does the myosin head contain?
Responda
  • Actin and ATP
  • Calcium and ATP
  • Actin and Calcium

Questão 22

Questão
What happens if trypsin is added to myosin?
Responda
  • Myosin is split into a tail and a neck/head region
  • Head and neck are broken apart

Questão 23

Questão
What happens when Papain is applied to myosin?
Responda
  • Split into a tail and head+neck region
  • broken apart into a head and a neck

Questão 24

Questão
There are 2 myosin light chain components per head. For a total of 4 MLC components.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 25

Questão
What are the two forms of actin?
Responda
  • Globular & Filamentous
  • Aggregated & Spiraled

Questão 26

Questão
What are the two main regulatory proteins that associate with actin?
Responda
  • Troponin
  • Tropomyosin
  • Malbulim
  • Triulin

Questão 27

Questão
What was proposed in the Sliding Filament Theory?
Responda
  • The width of the A-band remains constant, the I-band and H band gets shorter
  • The width of the I-band remains constant, the A-band gets shorter
  • The width of the H-band and I-band remains constant, the I-band gets shorter

Questão 28

Questão
A. Huxley and H. Huxley both confirmed the Sliding Filament Theory through different methods.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 29

Questão
Describe what is happening at each of the points identified in the graph
Responda
  • Myosin is being crushed by the Z-disks
  • Polarity Interference; reduces Ca releas
  • Maximal cross bridge overlap
  • A little overlap
  • No more cross-bridges being formed
  • Ascending Limb
  • Plateau
  • Descending Limb

Questão 30

Questão
Pure actin contains [blank_start]no binding proteins[blank_end]. Native actin contains [blank_start]tropomyosin and troponin[blank_end].
Responda
  • no binding proteins
  • tropomyosin and troponin

Questão 31

Questão
What characterizes rigormortis?
Responda
  • Calcium is present, ATP is absent
  • Calcium is absent, ATP is present
  • Troponin is present, tropomyosin is absent
  • Tropomyosin is absent, troponin is present

Questão 32

Questão
What is the phyisiological calcium concentration?
Responda
  • 10^-9 M
  • 10^-5 M
  • 10^-2 M
  • 10^-3 M

Questão 33

Questão
What is the highest number of calcium ions that troponin C can bind to?
Responda
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4

Questão 34

Questão
Do invertebrates have Na+ channels in T tubules?
Responda
  • Yes
  • No

Questão 35

Questão
How is an action potential propogated in invertebrate T Tubules?
Responda
  • Via passive diffusion
  • Via voltage gated sodium channels
  • They don't propogate action potentials

Questão 36

Questão
What type of ACh receptors do skeltal muscles have?
Responda
  • Muscharinic
  • Nicotinic

Questão 37

Questão
What stores calcium in a cell?
Responda
  • Mitochondria
  • Lysosome
  • Smooth ER
  • Rough ER

Questão 38

Questão
What does it mean to be an "L-type" voltage gated channel?
Responda
  • Long-lasting activation
  • Short-activation

Questão 39

Questão
What type of receptor is dihydrophyridine?
Responda
  • L-type voltage gated calcium channel
  • tetrameric receptor with a central pore

Questão 40

Questão
What type of receptor is ryanodine?
Responda
  • L-Type voltage-gated calcium channel
  • tetrameric protein with a central pore

Questão 41

Questão
The dihydropyridine receptor is localized on the T-tubules while the ryanodine receptor is localized on the SER membrane.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 42

Questão
The huge difference in concentration between the SER and the cytoplasm helps with [blank_start]diffusion[blank_end] but, not with [blank_start]reuptake[blank_end]. Therefore, [blank_start]calsequesterin[blank_end] helps to sequester calcium in the SER and help the SERCa pumps wor.
Responda
  • diffusion
  • reuptake
  • calsequesterin
  • calmodulin

Questão 43

Questão
Which elements in muscle contribute to the resting tension (if a muscle were to be pulled without cross-bridges forming)?
Responda
  • Parallel Elements
  • Series Elements
  • Perpendicular Elements

Questão 44

Questão
What type of elements do tendons serve as in muscle mechanics?
Responda
  • External parallel component
  • External series component

Questão 45

Questão
What is the difference between a concentric and an eccentric contraction? (concentric, eccentric)
Responda
  • Muscle shortens, Muscle lengthens
  • Muscle lengthens, Muscle shortens

Questão 46

Questão
Why is the muscle force generated from a single depolarization relatively small?
Responda
  • It takes time for the series elastic components to stretch and generate force
  • It takes time for the parallel elastic components to stretch and generate force
  • It takes time for the contractile elements to stretch and generate force

Questão 47

Questão
Incomplete tetanus occurs when there is a [blank_start]small refractory period[blank_end] between action potentials. Fused or complete tetanus occurs when there is [blank_start]no refractory period[blank_end] between action potentials.
Responda
  • small refractory period
  • no refractory period

Questão 48

Questão
As tetanus occurs, the overall force that the muscle can generate increases but, the force reaches a plateau after fused tetanus occurs.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 49

Questão
What is contained in a motor unit?
Responda
  • Motor neuron
  • axons contacting muscle cells
  • grey matter
  • interneuron

Questão 50

Questão
The motor neuron extends out of the [blank_start]ventral[blank_end] horn of the spinal cord
Responda
  • ventral

Questão 51

Questão
Spatial Summation controls:
Responda
  • The number of muscle cells recruited
  • The distribution of muscle cells in the body
  • The areas of the body that respond to external stimuli

Questão 52

Questão
What happens in a skeletal muscle cell as the velocity of shortening increases
Responda
  • fewer cross-bridges form
  • more cross-bridges form
  • reduced average force/cross-bridge
  • increased average force/cross-bridge

Questão 53

Questão
Power reaches a max at 20-40% of Vmax.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 54

Questão
The muscle uses ATP in the following ways: 25%: [blank_start]Pumping calcium via SERCa pumps[blank_end] [blank_start]50%[blank_end]: Heat [blank_start]25%[blank_end]: Useful work in the cross-bridge cycle
Responda
  • Pumping calcium via SERCa pumps
  • 50%
  • 25%

Questão 55

Questão
What is muscle efficiency?
Responda
  • Useful work/Total E Used
  • How fast a muscle can shorten
  • How strong a muscle is

Questão 56

Questão
Is there work generated from an isometric contraction?
Responda
  • Yes
  • No

Questão 57

Questão
What are the three sources of ATP for muscle?
Responda
  • Glycolysis
  • Oxidative Phosphorylation
  • Creatine Phosphate
  • Steroids

Questão 58

Questão
Which two (helper) proteins are involved in the smooth muscle thick and thin filament network?
Responda
  • Caldesmon
  • Xinculin
  • Alpha-actin
  • Shelanin

Questão 59

Questão
STRESS RELAXATION ALLOWS ORGANS THAT ARE LINED BY SMOOTH MUSCLE (E.G. THE GUT) TO ACCOMMODATE LARGE CHANGES IN DIAMETER AND STILL PRODUCE ABOUT THE SAME AMOUNT OF FORCE
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 60

Questão
Match the type of smooth muscle with its mechanism of action: 1. Single Unit Smooth Muscle (Visceral): [blank_start]gap junctions, myogenic[blank_end] 2. Multi-unit Smooth Muscle: [blank_start]independent, neurogenic, fine control[blank_end]
Responda
  • gap junctions, myogenic
  • independent, neurogenic, fine control

Questão 61

Questão
How does visceral smooth muscle depolarize without neural input?
Responda
  • It doesn't, it requires neural input
  • Pacemaker potentials
  • Slow wave potentials

Questão 62

Questão
Where are neurotransmitters released from in neural activation of smooth muscle?
Responda
  • Varsities
  • Varicosities
  • Synapses
  • No neurotransmitters are released

Questão 63

Questão
What is the neurotransmitter and receptor type involved in parasympathetic smooth muscle activation?
Responda
  • Ach, nicotinic
  • Ach, muscarinic
  • Epi, alpha
  • Epi, beta

Questão 64

Questão
What is the neurotransmitter(s) and receptor type(s) involved in sympathetic smooth muscle activation?
Responda
  • Alpha (Norepi & Epi) - contraction; Beta (Epi)- relaxation
  • Beta (Norepi & Epi) - contraction; Alpha (Epi)-relaxation
  • Beta (Epi) - contraction; Alpha (Norepi & Epi) - relaxation

Questão 65

Questão
What is it about smooth muscles that allow for Calcium diffusion WITHOUT the presence of T-Tubules?
Responda
  • small cell diameter
  • decreased diffusion distance
  • larger cell diameter

Questão 66

Questão
The SER is the primary source of Calcium for smooth muscles.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 67

Questão
What does MLCK do?
Responda
  • Phosphorylate MLC
  • Dephosphorylate MLC
  • Hydroxylate MLC
  • Dehydroxylate MLC

Questão 68

Questão
What is an antagonist of MLCK?
Responda
  • MLC phosphotase
  • MLC hydrotase
  • MLC dehydrogenase
  • MLC transferase

Questão 69

Questão
What are the effects of serotonin and protein kinase C on smooth muscle?
Responda
  • They promote muscle activity by inhibiting MLC phosphatase
  • They promote muscle relaxation by inhibiting MLC phosphatase

Questão 70

Questão
How is protein kinase activated in smooth muscle and how does it affect MLCK?
Responda
  • Activated by Beta2 receptors; phosphorylates MLCK; inactivates it
  • Activated by Beta2 receptors; phosphorylates MLCK; activates it
  • Activated by Alpha1 receptors; phosphorylates MLCK; inactivates it
  • Activated by Alpha1 receptors; phosphorylates MLCK; activates it

Questão 71

Questão
Is Protein Kinase C an inhibitory or excitatory protein in smooth muscle contraction?
Responda
  • Excitatory
  • Inhibitory

Questão 72

Questão
What is reciprocal innervation and when does it occur?
Responda
  • Excitation to neuron and inhibition to another; withdrawl reflex
  • Excitation to neuron and inhibition to another; cross-extensor reflex
  • Excitation to neuron and inhibition to another; stretch reflex

Questão 73

Questão
What is the muscle involved in a myotatic/stretch reflex and what are some of its basic characteristics?
Responda
  • Intrafusal muscle
  • Tonic; doesn't fire APs
  • Fires APs
  • Responds to stretch/shortening

Questão 74

Questão
What are the receptors contained within the intrafusal muscle?
Responda
  • Annulospiral Receptor
  • Flower Spray Receptor
  • Dihydropuridine Receptor
  • Ryanodine Receptor

Questão 75

Questão
What type of neuron is used by Annulospiral Receptors
Responda
  • IA - afferent
  • IIA- afferent
  • IIIA - afferent

Questão 76

Questão
What type of neuron is used by Flower Spray Receptors in a myotatic reflex?
Responda
  • IA - afferent
  • IIA - afferent
  • IIIA- afferent

Questão 77

Questão
Label the layers of the skin and the 4 mammalian mechanoreceptors
Responda
  • Epidermis
  • Dermis
  • Pacinan Corpuscle
  • Ruffini Ending
  • Messiner's Corpuscle
  • Merkel Discs
  • Free Nerve Ending
  • Hair Cell

Questão 78

Questão
What type of cell is this?
Responda
  • Hair Cell

Questão 79

Questão
Label the Ear
Responda
  • Pinna
  • External Auditory Meatus
  • Tympanic Membrane
  • Ossicles
  • Semi-circular canals
  • Auditory Nerve
  • Cochlea
  • Oval Window
  • Round Window
  • Outer Ear
  • Middle Ear
  • Inner Ear

Questão 80

Questão
Label the diagram
Responda
  • External auditory meatus
  • Tympanic Membrane
  • Malleus (Hammer)
  • Incus (Anvil)
  • Stapes (Stirup)
  • Oval Window
  • Round Window

Questão 81

Questão
The two muscles involved in dampening noise to the inner ear are the tensor tympani muscle and the stapedius muscle. The tensor tempani is active when we are [blank_start]chewing[blank_end] whereas the stapedius muscle contracts when we are [blank_start]talking[blank_end].
Responda
  • chewing
  • talking

Questão 82

Questão
Label the inner ear
Responda
  • Oval Window
  • Scala Vestibuli
  • Helicotrema
  • Scala tympani
  • Stapes
  • Vestibular Membrane
  • Basilar Membrane
  • Scala Media
  • Organ of Corti
  • Round Window

Questão 83

Questão
The scala vestibuli and the scala tempani are continuous, there is no membrane separating them from eachother.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 84

Questão
The organ of Corti sits on top of the Basilar Membrane.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 85

Questão
Label pathway 1 and 2 with their purpose.
Responda
  • No auditory transduction
  • Transverse movement across scala media

Questão 86

Questão
The perilymph has a [blank_start]similar make up to the ECF[blank_end]. The Endolymph has a [blank_start]high K+ concentration[blank_end].
Responda
  • similar make up to the ECF
  • high K+ concentration

Questão 87

Questão
Humans can hear between what frequency?
Responda
  • 20 Hz-2000 Hz
  • 200-2000 Hz
  • 1000-2000 Hz

Questão 88

Questão
Label the image. Which organ is this?
Responda
  • Organ of Corti
  • Tectorial Membrane
  • Scala Media
  • Support Cells
  • Inner Hair Cells
  • Auditory Nerve
  • Stereocillia
  • Outer Hair Cells

Questão 89

Questão
Outer hair cells [blank_start]control auditory transduction[blank_end] by lengthening and shortening the hair cells, while inner hair cells [blank_start]lead to auditory transduction[blank_end].
Responda
  • control auditory transduction
  • lead to auditory transduction

Questão 90

Questão
What is the kinocilium?
Responda
  • Stereocillia present in the eye
  • A more rigid stereocilium that is part of the hair cell
  • A small micro-organism

Questão 91

Questão
What are tip links connected to?
Responda
  • Adjacent stereocilia
  • Stretch-activated channels
  • Voltage-Gated Channels

Questão 92

Questão
Why do Calcium and potassium enter stereocilia when stretch-gated channels are opened?
Responda
  • Hair cells are in the endolymph
  • Hair cells are in the perilymph
  • Hair cells are in the ECF

Questão 93

Questão
Which organs provide us information about balance and movement?
Responda
  • Semicircular Canals
  • Otolith Organs
  • Stapes
  • Ampulla

Questão 94

Questão
There are [blank_start]three[blank_end] semicircular canals that provide us information about [blank_start]rotational movement[blank_end]. The Utricle and Saccule are [blank_start]Otolith organs[blank_end] that give information about [blank_start]linear movement[blank_end]. The Utricle signals [blank_start]horizontal movement[blank_end], while the Saccule signals [blank_start]verticle movement[blank_end].
Responda
  • three
  • two
  • four
  • rotational movement
  • Otolith organs
  • linear movement
  • horizontal movement
  • verticle movement

Questão 95

Questão
Label the diagram
Responda
  • Semicircular Canals
  • Utricle
  • Saccule
  • Cochlea
  • Ampulla
  • Auditory Nerve
  • Oval Window
  • Round Window

Questão 96

Questão
What fluid fills the semi-circular canals?
Responda
  • Perilymph
  • Endolymph
  • ECF

Questão 97

Questão
If you rotate your head to the left, which way is the fluid in the semicircular canals moving?
Responda
  • To the right
  • To the left

Questão 98

Questão
When the head rotates, the ampulla in each ear
Responda
  • Move in the same direction
  • Move in opposite directions

Questão 99

Questão
When the ampulla moves it pulls on the __________, which affects ___________.
Responda
  • Hair cells, stretch activated channels
  • Stapes, stretch activated channels
  • Stretch activated channels, hair cells

Questão 100

Questão
When the hair cells are pushed towards the kinocilium, the cells are [blank_start]depolarized[blank_end]. When the hair cells are pushed away from the kinocilium, the cells are [blank_start]hyperpolarized[blank_end].
Responda
  • hyperpolarized
  • depolarized

Questão 101

Questão
When you move along one axis, the hair cells in one ear are depolarized while the hair cells in the other ear are hyperpolarized. This helps you determine directionality of the movement.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 102

Questão
What happens to the ampulla after you consume a generous amount of alcohol?
Responda
  • Specific Gravity of fluid in the canals changes --> ampulla flops over
  • Your otoliths detach and make you feel like you are spinning
  • Your semicircular canals become blocked

Questão 103

Questão
What are otoliths?
Responda
  • The smallest bones in the body
  • Small Stones of calcium carbonate
  • They are part of the hair cell

Questão 104

Questão
Label the diagram
Responda
  • Kinocilium
  • Stereocillia
  • Otoliths
  • Gelatinous Layer
  • Hair Cell
  • Support Cell
  • Nerve Fibre

Questão 105

Questão
What is the function of otoliths and the gelatinous layer they are found in?
Responda
  • They cause a lag in the movement of hair cells which helps us detect linear motion
  • They contact hair cells to activate them
  • They cause the cell to depolarize

Questão 106

Questão
What is vertigo caused by?
Responda
  • Otoliths detaching and activating hair cells
  • Constant depolarization of hair cells
  • Missing Kinocillium

Questão 107

Questão
Label the image
Responda
  • Fovea
  • Optic Disk
  • Optic Nerve
  • Sclera
  • Lens
  • Vitreous Humor
  • Aqueous Humor
  • Cornea
  • Pupil
  • Iris
  • Ciliary Body
  • Suspensory Ligaments
  • Retina

Questão 108

Questão
Where does the majority of refraction take place (in the eye)?
Responda
  • Lens
  • Cornea
  • Retina
  • Aqueous Humor

Questão 109

Questão
What produced aqueous humor?
Responda
  • Cornea
  • Ciliary Bodies
  • Conjunctiva
  • Lens

Questão 110

Questão
What does the aquous humor do?
Responda
  • Delivers oxygen and nutrients to the cornea
  • Is the sole layer responsible for refracting light
  • Diffractions light

Questão 111

Questão
How is vitreous humor produced?
Responda
  • Ciliary Bodies
  • Residual aqueous humor that passes through the lens
  • Conjunctiva

Questão 112

Questão
What is the structure that allows aqueous humor to drain from the eye?
Responda
  • Tear Duct
  • Conjunctiva
  • Pupil
  • Canals of Schlem

Questão 113

Questão
How many mL of aqueous humor is produced in a day?
Responda
  • 1
  • 2
  • 5
  • 10

Questão 114

Questão
What is the purpose of the iris?
Responda
  • To make the eye look nice
  • To stop light and force it to enter via the pupil
  • To diffract light

Questão 115

Questão
Match the muscle with 1) Movement of eye 2) Where it is located in the iris 3) which system it responds to: Circular: [blank_start]constrictive[blank_end]; [blank_start]center[blank_end]; [blank_start]parasympathetic[blank_end] Radial: [blank_start]dilates[blank_end]; [blank_start]outer portion[blank_end]; [blank_start]sympathetic[blank_end]
Responda
  • constrictive
  • center
  • parasympathetic
  • dilates
  • outer portion
  • sympathetic

Questão 116

Questão
Label the image, - the blue and pink arrows indicated the type of stimulation - label the other lines with the characteristics of that particular part of the eye - In front of the cornea of each eye, label the type of light that causes the observed changes
Responda
  • Sympathetic Stimulation
  • Far object --> light comes in parallel
  • Near object --> light comes in diverging
  • Relaxed Ciliary Muscles
  • Flattened, weak lens
  • Tight suspensory ligaments
  • Parasympathetic Stimulation
  • Contracted Ciliary Muscles
  • Strong, Rounded Lens
  • Loose suspensory ligaments

Questão 117

Questão
Match the terms: Normal Vision: [blank_start]emmetropia[blank_end] Near-sighted: [blank_start]myopia[blank_end] Far- sighted: [blank_start]hyperopia[blank_end]
Responda
  • emmetropia
  • myopia
  • hyperopia

Questão 118

Questão
How do you correct myopia?
Responda
  • Concave lens to allow light to reach the back of the retina
  • Convex lens to allow light to reach the back of the retina

Questão 119

Questão
What happens in hyperopia?
Responda
  • Light is focused behind the retina
  • The lens is too weak
  • The lens is too strong
  • Far-sighted
  • Near-sighted

Questão 120

Questão
As we age...
Responda
  • The crystalline structure in our eyes starts to deteriorate
  • Cataracts form
  • Lens becomes more flexible
  • Lens becomes less flexible
  • Presbyopia develops
  • Near-Sighted
  • Far-sighted

Questão 121

Questão
Label the Retinal Cells
Responda
  • Light
  • Ganglion Cell
  • Amacrine Cells
  • Bipolar Cells
  • Horizontal Cell
  • Rod
  • Cone
  • Back of Retina

Questão 122

Questão
What is it about the processing cells in the retina that allow light to travel to the photoreceptors?
Responda
  • They are transparent
  • There are spaces between the cells for light to pass through
  • Light cannot pass through, it has to be transmitted through the processing cells first

Questão 123

Questão
What is at the optic disk?
Responda
  • Blood Vessels
  • Highest Visual Acuity
  • Blind Spot
  • Axons of Ganglion Cells converge here
  • Optic Nerve
  • Macula

Questão 124

Questão
There are many more rods than cones in the retina.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 125

Questão
There are more [blank_start]rods[blank_end] than [blank_start]cones[blank_end] in the retina. Rods are activated by [blank_start]low light[blank_end] and have a [blank_start]slow[blank_end] response time. Cones are activated in [blank_start]intense light[blank_end] and have a [blank_start]fast[blank_end] response time. Rods are [blank_start]monochromatic[blank_end] while cones are [blank_start]trichromatic[blank_end].
Responda
  • rods
  • cones
  • low light
  • slow
  • intense light
  • fast
  • monochromatic
  • trichromatic

Questão 126

Questão
Cones are better than rods in detecting changes in visual stimuli.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 127

Questão
Which neurotransmitter is released by rods and cones?
Responda
  • Glutamate
  • Dopamine
  • Serotonin
  • Glutamine

Questão 128

Questão
Why are cones better at transducing light?
Responda
  • They have increased SA
  • They have disks in their outer segment
  • They have a larger amount of Glutamate that can be released

Questão 129

Questão
Retinal is derived from which vitamin?
Responda
  • Vit B1
  • Vit B6
  • Vit E
  • Vit A

Questão 130

Questão
When no light is present, retinal is in the all [blank_start]cis[blank_end] form. When light hits, it is converted into the all [blank_start]trans[blank_end] form. This form is also called [blank_start]metarhodopsin II[blank_end].
Responda
  • cis
  • trans
  • metarhodopsin II

Questão 131

Questão
cGMP phosphodiesterase converts [blank_start]cGMP[blank_end] into [blank_start]5' GMP[blank_end] which causes the rod cell to [blank_start]hyperpolarize[blank_end].
Responda
  • cGMP
  • 5' GMP
  • hyperpolarize

Questão 132

Questão
If an on-center bipolar cell is stimulated, this means that the off-center bipolar cell will not be stimulated.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 133

Questão
Label the diagram
Responda
  • Photoreceptor = hyperpolarized (LIGHT)
  • On-center bipolar (DEPOL)
  • On-center Ganglion (DEPOL)
  • Off-center Bipolar (HYPERPOL)
  • Off-center Ganglion (HYPERPOL)
  • Few APs
  • Many APs

Questão 134

Questão
What type of pathway is visual transduction following in this pathway ?(label in top L corner) Label the cell types present
Responda
  • Vertical Pathway
  • Lateral Pathway
  • Photoreceptor = HYPERPOL (LIGHT)
  • Horizontal = HYPERPOL
  • Adjacent PR = DEPOL
  • Adjacent PR = HYPERPOL
  • On-center bipolar = HYPERPOL
  • Off-center bipolar = HYPERPOL
  • Off-center ganglion = HYPERPOL
  • On-center ganglion = HYPERPOL
  • Few APs
  • Lots of APs

Questão 135

Questão
What type of process would generate these responses?
Responda
  • On-Center Processes
  • Off-Center Processes

Questão 136

Questão
What type of processes would generate these responses?
Responda
  • Off-Center Processes
  • On-Center Processes

Questão 137

Questão
Blue cones contain the pigment [blank_start]cyanolabe[blank_end] Green cones contain the pigment [blank_start]chlorolabe[blank_end] Red cones contain the pigment [blank_start]erythrolabe[blank_end]
Responda
  • cyanolabe
  • Chlorolabe
  • Erythrolabe
  • chlorolabe
  • Cyanolabe
  • erythrolabe
  • erythrolabe
  • cyanolabe
  • chlorolabe

Questão 138

Questão
Blue light has the [blank_start]shortest[blank_end] wavelength of light, while red has the [blank_start]longest[blank_end].
Responda
  • shortest
  • longest

Questão 139

Questão
What is color blindness caused by?
Responda
  • Deficiency in rods
  • Deficiency in cones
  • Difficiency in metarhodopsin II
  • Deficiency in retinal

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