front 1 The patellar "knee jerk" reflex is an example of a | back 1 stretch reflex |
front 2 The cervical nerve is not a branch of the | back 2 trigeminal nerve |
front 3 The phrenic nerve does not arise from the | back 3 brachial plexus |
front 4 Sensory receptors are classified by | back 4 type of stimulus detected, location in the body, and structural complexity. |
front 5 The posterior side of the thigh, leg, and foot is served by the | back 5 tibial nerve |
front 6 Starting at the spinal cord, the subdivisions of the brachial plexus are (in order): | back 6 roots, trunks, divisions, and cords. |
front 7 The cranial nerve with a cervical origin (spinal cord) is | back 7 the accessory |
front 8 A major nerve of the lumbar plexus is | back 8 the femoral |
front 9 Spinal nerves exiting the cord from the level of L4 to S4 form the | back 9 sacral plexus |
front 10 Inborn or intrinsic reflexes are involuntary, yet may be modified by | back 10 learned behavior |
front 11 Visceral identification is not an aspect of | back 11 sensory perception |
front 12 Striking the "funny bone" is actually stimulation of (or injury to) the | back 12 ulnar nerve |
front 13 A reflex that causes muscle relaxation and lengthening in response to muscle tension is called a | back 13 tendon reflex |
front 14 Pressure, pain, and temperature receptors in the skin are | back 14 exteroceptors |
front 15 Potentially damaging stimuli that result in pain are selectively detected by | back 15 nociceptors |
front 16 Pressure receptors | back 16 adapt most slowly |
front 17 Nerves that carry impulses toward the CNS only are | back 17 afferent nerves |
front 18 After axonal injury, regeneration in peripheral nerves is guided by | back 18 Schwann cells |
front 19 Regeneration within the CNS is prevented due to | back 19 growth-inhibiting proteins of oligodendrocytes. |
front 20 In a crossed-extensor reflex | back 20 if the right arm was grabbed it would flex and the left arm would extend. |
front 21 Pattern recognition allows us | back 21 to see a familiar face |
front 22 All processing at the circuit level going up to the perceptual level must | back 22 synapse in the thalamus. |
front 23 The sciatic nerve is a combination of two nerves | back 23 common fibular and tibial |
front 24 The median nerve is compressed in | back 24 carpal tunnel syndrome |
front 25 Bell's palsy is characterized by | back 25 paralysis of facial muscles |
front 26 Receptor, afferent neuron, integration center, efferent neuron, effector is | back 26 the correct simple spinal reflex arc. |
front 27 Mixed cranial nerves containing both motor and sensory fibers include | back 27 all oculomotor, trigeminal and facial nerves. |
front 28 Transduction refers to | back 28 conversion of stimulus energy into energy of a graded potential. |
front 29 The flexor muscles in the anterior arm (biceps brachii and brachialis) are innervated by the | back 29 musculocutaneous nerve |
front 30 The cranial nerves that have neural connections with the tongue include all except the | back 30 trochlear |
front 31 Problems in balance may follow trauma to the | back 31 vestibulocochlear nerve |
front 32 A fracture of the ethmoid bone could result in damage to | back 32 the olfactory nerve |
front 33 Ganglia associated with afferent nerve fibers contain | back 33 cell bodies of sensory neurons |
front 34 A fall or an improperly delivered gluteal injection could result in | back 34 sciatica |
front 35 Feeling a gentle caress on your arm would likely involve all of the following except | back 35 Pacinian corpuscles. |