front 1 1) A simple nervous system | back 1 Answer: E |
front 2 2) Most of the neurons in the human brain are | back 2 Answer: C |
front 3 3) The nucleus and most of the organelles in a neuron are located in
the | back 3 Answer: D |
front 4 4) In certain large animals, this type of neuron can extend beyond 1
meter in length. | back 4 Answer: B |
front 5 5) The somatic nervous system can alter the activities of its
targets, the skeletal muscle fibers, because | back 5 Answer: B |
front 6 6) The point of connection between two communicating neurons is
called | back 6 Answer: C |
front 7 7) In a simple synapse, neurotransmitter chemicals are released by
| back 7 Answer: B |
front 8 8) In a simple synapse, neurotransmitter chemicals are received by
| back 8 Answer: A |
front 9 9) In the communication between a motor neuron and a skeletal muscle,
| back 9 Answer: A |
front 10 10) For a neuron with an initial membrane potential at -70 mV, an
increase in the movement of potassium ions out of that neuron's
cytoplasm would result in | back 10 Answer: B |
front 11 11) Although the membrane of a "resting" neuron is highly
permeable to potassium ions, its membrane potential does not exactly
match the equilibrium potential for potassium because the neuronal
membrane is also | back 11 Answer: B |
front 12 12) The operation of the sodium-potassium "pump" moves
| back 12 Answer: D |
front 13 13) A cation that is more abundant as a solute in the cytosol of a
neuron than it is in the interstitial fluid outside the neuron is
| back 13 Answer: E |
front 14 14) The membrane potential that exactly offsets an ion's
concentration gradient is called the | back 14 Answer: C |
front 15 15) ATP hydrolysis directly powers the movement of | back 15 Answer: B |
front 16 16) Two fundamental concepts about the ion channels of a
"resting" neuron are that the channels | back 16 Answer: C |
front 17 17) Opening all of the sodium channels, with all other ion channels
closedwhich is an admittedly artificial settingon an otherwise
typical neuron should move its membrane potential to | back 17 Answer: E |
front 18 18) A graded hyperpolarization of a membrane can be induced by
| back 18 Answer: E |
front 19 19) Self-propagation and refractory periods are typical of | back 19 Answer: A |
front 20 20) The "selectivity" of a particular ion channel refers to
its | back 20 Answer: E |
front 21 21) A "resting" motor neuron is expected to | back 21 Answer: D |
front 22 22) The "threshold" potential of a membrane | back 22 Answer: D |
front 23 23) Action potentials move along axons | back 23 Answer: D |
front 24 24) A toxin that binds specifically to voltage-gated sodium channels
in axons would be expected to | back 24 Answer: B |
front 25 25) After the depolarization phase of an action potential, the
resting potential is restored by | back 25 Answer: B |
front 26 26) The "undershoot" phase of after-hyperpolarization is
due to | back 26 Answer: B |
front 27 27) Immediately after an action potential passes along an axon, it is
not possible to generate a second action potential; thus, we state
that the membrane is briefly | back 27 Answer: B |
front 28 28) An action potential can start in the middle of an axon and
proceed in both opposite directions when | back 28 Answer: B |
front 29 29) The primary means by which a neuron can communicate to a second
neuron is by | back 29 Answer: A |
front 30 30) In the sequence of permeability changes for a complete action
potential, the first of these events that occurs is | back 30 Answer: C |
front 31 31) Saltatory conduction is a term applied to | back 31 Answer: E |
front 32 32) The surface on a neuron that discharges the contents of synaptic
vesicles is the | back 32 Answer: E |
front 33 33) Neurotransmitters are released from axon terminals via | back 33 Answer: E |
front 34 34) The fastest possible conduction velocity of action potentials is
observed in | back 34 Answer: D |
front 35 35) Neural transmission across a mammalian synaptic gap is
accomplished by | back 35 Answer: C |
front 36 36) One possible disadvantage to a nerve net is that it might conduct
impulses in two directions from the point of the stimulus. Most of the
synapses in vertebrates conduct information in only one direction
| back 36 Answer: D |
front 37 37) The release of acetylcholine from the terminal of a motor neuron
is most directly linked to | back 37 Answer: E |
front 38 38) The observation that the acetylcholine released into the junction
between a motor neuron and a skeletal muscle binds to a sodium channel
and opens it is an example of | back 38 Answer: C |
front 39 39) An inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) occurs in a membrane
made more permeable to | back 39 Answer: A |
front 40 40) The following steps refer to various stages in transmission at a
chemical synapse. | back 40 Answer: C |
front 41 41) The activity of acetylcholine in a synapse is terminated by
| back 41 Answer: E |
front 42 42) Adjacent neurons with direct (non-neurotransmitter) action
potential transfer are said to have electrical synapses, based on the
presence of | back 42 Answer: B |
front 43 43) Ionotropic receptors are found at synapses operated via | back 43 Answer: A |
front 44 44) An example of ligand-gated ion channels is | back 44 Answer: B |
front 45 45) An example of the action of metabotropic receptors is when
| back 45 Answer: C |
front 46 46) Neurotransmitters categorized as inhibitory are expected to
| back 46 Answer: E |
front 47 47) When several EPSPs arrive at the axon hillock from different
dendritic locations, depolarizing the postsynaptic cell to threshold
for an action potential, this is an example of | back 47 Answer: B |
front 48 48) When several IPSPs arrive at the axon hillock rapidly in sequence
from a single dendritic location, hyperpolarizing the postsynaptic
cell more and more and thus preventing an action potential, this is an
example of | back 48 Answer: A |
front 49 49) Assume that a single IPSP has a negative magnitude of -0.5 mV at
the axon hillock, and that a single EPSP has a positive magnitude of
+0.5 mV. For a neuron with an initial membrane potential of -70 mV,
the net effect of the simultaneous arrival of six IPSPs and two EPSPs
would be to move the membrane potential to | back 49 Answer: A |
front 50 50) Receptors for neurotransmitters are of primary functional
importance in assuring one-way synaptic transmission because they are
mostly found on the | back 50 Answer: C |
front 51 51) Functionally, which cellular location is the neuron's
"decision-making site" as to whether or not an action
potential will be initiated? | back 51 Answer: B |
front 52 52) Neurotransmitters affect postsynaptic cells by | back 52 Answer: E |
front 53 53) The primary neurotransmitter from the parasympathetic system that
influences its autonomic targets is | back 53 Answer: A |
front 54 54) The major inhibitory neurotransmitter of the human brain is
| back 54 Answer: E |
front 55 55) The major excitatory neurotransmitter of the human brain is
| back 55 Answer: C |
front 56 56) A neuropeptide that might function as a natural analgesic is
| back 56 Answer: C |
front 57 57) An amino acid that operates at inhibitory synapses in the brain
is | back 57 Answer: E |
front 58 58) The botulinum toxin reduces the synaptic release of | back 58 Answer: A |
front 59 59) The heart rate decreases in response to the arrival of | back 59 Answer: A |
front 60 60) A chemical that affects neuronal function but is not stored in
presynaptic vesicles is | back 60 Answer: D |
front 61 61) The membrane potential is closest to the equilibrium potential
for potassium at label | back 61 Answer: D |
front 62 62) The membrane's permeability to sodium ions is at its maximum at
label | back 62 Answer: B |
front 63 63) The minimum graded depolarization needed to operate the
voltage-gated sodium and potassium channels is indicated by the label
| back 63 Answer: A |
front 64 64) The cell is not hyperpolarized; however, repolarization is in
progress, as the sodium channels are closing or closed, and many
potassium channels have opened at label | back 64 Answer: C |
front 65 65) The neuronal membrane is at its resting potential at label
| back 65 Answer: E |
front 66 66) Action potentials are normally carried in only one direction:
from the axon hillock toward the axon terminals. If you experimentally
depolarize the middle of the axon to threshold, using an electronic
probe, then | back 66 Answer: D |
front 67 67) Assume that excessive consumption of ethanol increases the influx
of negative chloride ions into "common sense" neurons whose
action potentials are needed for you to act appropriately and not harm
yourself or others. Thus, any resulting poor decisions associated with
ethanol ingestion are likely due to | back 67 Answer: B |
front 68 68) What happens when a resting neuron's membrane depolarizes?
| back 68 Answer: C |
front 69 69) A common feature of action potentials is that they | back 69 Answer: C |
front 70 70) Where are neurotransmitter receptors located? | back 70 Answer: C |
front 71 71) Temporal summation always involves | back 71 Answer: E |
front 72 72) Why are action potentials usually conducted in one direction?
| back 72 Answer: B |
front 73 73) Which of the following is a direct result of depolarizing the
presynaptic membrane of an axon terminal? | back 73 Answer: A |