iWriteGigs

Fresh Grad Lands Job as Real Estate Agent With Help from Professional Writers

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Manush’s story shows the importance of using powerful keywords to his resume in landing the job he wanted.

Neurophysiology

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  Prince George Community College  »  Biology  »  Bio 2050 – Anatomy and Physiology  »  Spring 2021  »  Neurophysiology

Need help with your exam preparation?

Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #1
A  potassium exits, repolarizing the cell to a negative value.
B  potassium enters, repolarizing the cell to a positive value.
C  potassium exits, depolarizing the cell to an even more negative value.
D  potassium enters, repolarizing the cell to a negative value.
E  potassium enters, depolarizing the cell to a positive value.
Question #2
A  a valley where the low point approaches the threshold value.
B  a hill where the high point approaches the threshold value.
C  a valley where the low point is the farthest away from the threshold value.
D  a hill where the high point is the farthest away from the threshold value.
Question #3
A  opening of chemically gated calcium channels and diffusion of calcium out of the synaptic knob to the interstitial fluid.
B  closure of voltage-gated calcium channels in the synaptic knob membrane.
C  opening of chemically gated calcium channels and diffusion of calcium into the synaptic knob.
D  opening of voltage-gated calcium channels and diffusion of calcium out of the synaptic knob to the interstitial fluid.
E  opening of voltage-gated calcium channels and diffusion of calcium into the synaptic knob.
Question #6
A  FALSE
B  TRUE
Question #7
A  temporal summation.
B  several action potentials.
C  suprathreshold hyperpolarization.
D  spatial summation.
Question #8
A  D fibers, and they conduct impulses at 0.1 meter per second.
B  D fibers, and they conduct impulses at 0.01 meter per second.
C  A fibers, and they conduct impulses at 10 meters per second.
D  C fibers, and they conduct impulses at 1 meter per second.
E  C fibers, and they conduct impulses at 100 meters per second.
Question #9
A  myelinated regions.
B  neurofibril nodes.
Question #10
A  spatial summation.
B  recruitment.
C  facilitation.
D  temporal summation.
E  presynaptic potentiation.
Question #11
A  varies in size depending on the magnitude of the stimulus (larger voltage change for stronger stimulus).
B  lasts for several seconds after ion channels have opened, closed, and reset.
C  is all or none (always the same intensity).
D  travels the length of the nerve fiber (is long-distance).
Question #12
A  Relative refractory period
B  Absolute refractory period
Question #13
A  one electrode inside the cell and another inside another cell.
B  one electrode inside the cell and another outside the body.
C  one microelectrode inside the neuron and another in the interstitial fluid.
D  two electrodes inside the neuron.
Question #14
A  mechanically gated channels.
B  voltage-gated channels.
C  sodium-potassium pumps.
D  chemically gated channels.
Question #15
A  reuptake by the presynaptic cell.
B  uptake by the postsynaptic cell.
C  being engulfed by a supporting glial cell.
D  degradation by an enzyme.
Question #16
A  the entry of any ion.
B  either the entry of an anion or the exit of a cation.
C  the entrance of either sodium or potassium.
D  either the entry of a cation or the exit of an anion.
Question #17
A  chemically, dendrite
B  voltage-, axon
C  chemically, axon
D  voltage-, dendrite
Question #18
A  inversely related to both voltage and resistance.
B  directly related to voltage and inversely related to resistance.
C  directly related to both voltage and resistance.
D  indirectly related to voltage and directly related to resistance.
Question #19
A  dendritic lassos.
B  phagocytosis by a macrophage.
C  reuptake by the presynaptic cell.
D  endocytosis by the postsynaptic cell.
Question #20
A  their resting state to their inactivated state.
B  their activated state to their resting state.
C  their inactivated state to their resting state.
D  their resting state to their activated state.