The regulation of the conditions inside your body to maintain a stable internal environment in response to changes in both internal and external conditions
What are two types of communication systems?
Nervous and hormonal
What are the main three components of automatic control systems?
receptors,coordination centres (the brain, spinal cord and pancres) and effectors
What is a negative feedback and why does system use this?
It is when the level of something gets too high or too low, your body uses negative feedback to bring it back to normal. It keeps internal environment stable.
What is a stimulus?
A change in the environment
What happens when level of something decreases or increases?
receptor detects a stimulus
the coordination centre receives and processes the information, generates a response
effector produces response which counteracts the change and restores the optimum level - the level increases or decreases
Why does the body need to maintain optimal conditions?
For optimal enzyme action and cell function
True or false? Homeostasis ensure internal conditions stay exactly constant, they don't fluctuate at all.
False
What is the role of a receptor?
Detects changes in the internal or external environment
What is the role of a coordination centre?
Interprets changes and organises a response
two types of effectors and state what they do
Muscles contract and glands release hormones
Is the nervous system or the endocrine system faster acting?
Nervous
Which system acts more generally across the body, the nervous system or the endocrine system?
Endocrine
What`s negative feedback?
whenever the levels of something get too high they're brought back down, and whenever the levels of something get too low, they're brought back up.