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Biology đ
homeostasis and response
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Cards (53)
Homeostasis
â¨
the process of keeping the
internal
conditions of the body
constant
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Receptors
â¨
cells found in
sense organs
, e.g. eyes, ears, nose
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Effectors
â¨
part of the body (e.g. a muscle or a gland) that produces a
response
to
stimuli
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Negative feedback
â¨
a set of events that detects a
variable
and then corrects any change in the
variable
away from a set value
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Thermoregulatory
centreâ¨
the part of the
brain
responsible for maintaining a constant body
temperature
in warm-blooded animals
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Vasodilation
â¨
occurs when blood vessels in the skin become wider so that more
blood
flows close to the surface of the skin to
increase heat loss
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Vasoconstriction
â¨
occurs when blood vessels in the skin become
narrower
so that
less
blood flows close to the surface of the skin
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Central nervous system
(CNS)â¨
the part of the nervous system made up of the
brain
and
spinal cord
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Synapse
â¨
the
gap
between two
neurones
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Cerebral cortex
â¨
the area at the top of the
brain
that is responsible for
intelligence
and initiating movements
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Cerebellum
â¨
part of the brain, at the
rear
, that is responsible for
balance
and controlling movements
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Medulla
â¨
the area of the
brain
that controls
heartbeat
and breathing
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Retina
â¨
the layer at the back of the eye that contains the
lightsensitive
receptors
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Optic nerve
â¨
a collection of neurones that pass nerve impulses from the
eye
to the
brain
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Sclera
â¨
the
tough white coating
to the eye
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Cornea
â¨
the
transparent
membrane that covers the
eyeball
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Iris
â¨
the coloured part of the eye that changes the
size
of the pupil in response to different
light intensities
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Pupil
â¨
the
opening
at the front of the eye that lets
light
enter
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Ciliary muscles
â¨
muscles in the eyes that can change the shape of the
lens
for
accommodation
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Suspensory ligaments
â¨
structures that attach the
ciliary
muscle to the
lens
in the eye
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Accomodation
â¨
process that occurs to enable the eye to
change
so that objects at different distances can be focused on the
retina
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Refract
â¨
to bend / change the
direction
of a light ray (commonly performed by a
lens
)
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Myopia
â¨
the condition that stops a personâs eyes from focusing on
distant
objects clearly
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Hyperopia
â¨
the condition that stops a personâs eyes from focusing on
near
objects clearly
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Endocrine system
â¨
a system of glands that release
hormones
directly into the
bloodstream
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Hormone
â¨
a chemical messenger produced by a
gland
that travels in the
blood
to its target organ
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Pituitary gland
â¨
a small gland at the base of the brain that produces
hormones
; known as the
âmaster glandâ
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Adrenaline
â¨
hormone released from the adrenal gland, which prepares the body for
âfight
or
flightâ
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Thyroxine
â¨
a hormone released from the
thyroid
gland that controls the
metabolic rate
of the body
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Type
1
diabetesâ¨
a condition where not enough
insulin
is produced by the
pancreas
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Type
2
diabetesâ¨
a condition where
insulin
is produced but the cells of the body do
not
respond to it
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Urea
â¨
a
waste
product from the breakdown of proteins formed in the
liver
and excreted in urine
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Deamination
â¨
the
breakdown
of excess amino acids in the
liver
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Selective reabsorption
â¨
the process of
active transport
that reabsorbs useful molecules back into the blood from the
kidney tubules
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Tubules
â¨
small tubes in the
kidney
, where blood is filtered, selective reabsorption takes place, and
urine
is produced
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ADH
â¨
hormone released from the pituitary gland, which acts on the
kidneys
causing more
water
to be reabsorbed back into the blood
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Dialysis
â¨
the artificial removal of
urea
and excess material from the blood (used when the
kidneys
fail)
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Oestrogen
â¨
a hormone secreted by the
ovaries
that inhibits the production of
FSH
and triggers the production of LH
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Ovulation
â¨
the release of an egg (ovum) from the
ovary
into the
fallopian
tube
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Testosterone
â¨
a
hormone
produced by the
testes
that controls the male sexual characteristics
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