RECAPPING Chapter 5

RECAPPING Chapter 5
With Practice questions
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Slide 1: Slide
BiologieMiddelbare schoolhavo, vwoLeerjaar 1

This lesson contains 55 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

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RECAPPING Chapter 5
With Practice questions

Slide 1 - Slide

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iris
retina
sclera
cornea
pupil
optic nerve
lens

Slide 2 - Drag question

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What is the name of the part of the eye that controls the size of the pupil?
A
Sclera
B
Cornea
C
Retina
D
Iris

Slide 3 - Quiz

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auricle
outer ear canal
eardrum
eustachian tube
cochlea
hammer
stirrup
anvil

Slide 4 - Drag question

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What part of the ear vibrates first?
A
semi-circular canals
B
eardrum
C
ossicles
D
cochlea

Slide 5 - Quiz

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What is not a little bone in your ear?
A
hammer
B
anvil
C
stirrup
D
cochlea

Slide 6 - Quiz

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If you loose your sense of balance, you also become deaf.
A
true
B
false

Slide 7 - Quiz

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Why do we have semi-circular canals?
A
so we can hear ourselves speak
B
to pass on vibrations
C
to keep our balance
D
all of the above

Slide 8 - Quiz

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olfactory bulb
olfactory epithelium
nasal cavity
nostrils

Slide 9 - Drag question

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Why do we taste badly when we have a cold?
A
we do taste but because we feel ill our brain doesn’t register the flavours.
B
because the nasal cavity is full of snots and no chemicals get to the receptors
C
because the nerves are broken

Slide 10 - Quiz

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If your are night blind your rods do not work.
A
true
B
false

Slide 11 - Quiz

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When light enters the eye, it passes through various regions until it reaches the optic nerve. Which of the following gives the correct order for light passing through the eye? 
lens
retina
cornea
pupil

Slide 12 - Drag question

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Where are electrical signals produced when light is perceived?

Slide 13 - Open question

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An influence on an organism from its surroundings is a....

Slide 14 - Open question

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When Max is tasting the food, ...... are sent from his tongue to his brain via .....

Slide 15 - Open question

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Two students say the following about the brain.
Wesley: “The brain is sensitive to stimuli.”
Tim: “You become aware of the perception in your brain.”
A
Tim
B
Wesley
C
Neither
D
Both

Slide 16 - Quiz

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Two functions are listed below:
1. sensing stimuli;
2. processing signals coming from the senses.

Which of these functions are performed by the nervous system?
A
1
B
2
C
1 and 2

Slide 17 - Quiz

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SENSE
SENSE ORGAN
STIMULUS
SENSORY 
RECEPTOR
NEURONS
Hearing
Sound waves
Ear
Convert stimuli into nerve impulses
Transport nerve impulses 
Form a connection between the senses and the brain

Slide 18 - Drag question

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Hearing damage
Almost three quarters of young people are aware that they run the risk of getting hearing damage if they are exposed to noise from headphones, clubs or festivals for too long, but they do nothing to prevent that damage. Hearing damage caused by noise happens when the hairs of sensory cells in the ears are damaged by the loud noises.


Question follows!

Slide 19 - Slide

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The text on the last slide tells you how loud noises can damage parts of the ear. In which of the numbered parts in the figure does this damage occur?
What is the name of this part?

Slide 20 - Open question

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5.1 Stimuli and responses

Slide 21 - Slide

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Senses in the human





Sense (zintuig) = "meetapparatuur"/ receptor om de omgeving mee waar te nemen.   All senses = sensory system

Slide 22 - Slide

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How does the nervous system work?
Sensory cells (receptor) receive stimulus from
                               outside (for example chocolate)
   sensory neurons                                                                                                                                      = impulses     interneurons ( spinal cord)   

             brain    

    interneurons ( spinal cord)             

    motor neurons            muscles (effector)

Slide 23 - Slide

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Sensory receptors in your ear receive the sound and change it into nerve impulses.
The nerve impulses travel along neurons to your brain:
You become aware of your phone ringing.
The brain sends its own nerve impulses along other neurons to your arm muscle.
Your arm muscle contract and you pick up the phone = response.

Slide 24 - Drag question

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5.1 Stimuli and responses
Stimulus
stimulans, gedragsprikkel Any external or internal change that causes a reaction.

response
reactie, respons The reaction to a stimulus.

sensory receptors
zintuigcellen Specialised cells that convert stimuli into electrical signals that your body can respond to.

Slide 25 - Slide

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5.2 The senses

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stimuli and responses
stimulus
sensory receptor
neurons
effectors
response

Slide 27 - Slide

stimuli plural
stimulus
How does the nervous system work?
  1. A stimulus comes from the enviroment
  2. Sensory receptors convert the stimulus
  3. The nerve impulse goes to the brain
  4. The neurons conduct the impulses
  5. In the brain you become aware
  6. The brain sends impulses to an effector
  7. The effectors create a response

Slide 28 - Slide

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pathway
stimulus = external or internal change
sensory receptors = convert stimuli into electrical signals
neurons = bring these signals to your brain (impulses)
effectors = are told how to react by your brain (via impulses through neurons)  that's your response

Slide 29 - Slide

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senses
vision - light rays
hearing - sound waves
smell - chemicals
taste - chemicals
feeling - pressure, pain, touch and  temperature

Slide 30 - Slide

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5.2 The senses
sense organs 
Organs such as your eyes, ears, nose, tongue and skin.

senses Abilities 
given by sense organs, such as vision, hearing, smell, taste and feeling.

Slide 31 - Slide

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5.3 Seeing

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Slide 33 - Slide

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iris
retina
sclera
cornea
pupil
optic nerve
lens

Slide 34 - Drag question

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retina

Slide 35 - Slide

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blind spot/optic nerve

Slide 36 - Slide

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Glasses
accomodating or eyeball length 

Far sighted (Verziend): Short eyeball, only clear vision of distant objects.

Short-sighted (Bijziend): Long eyeball, only clear vision of nearby objects. 

Slide 37 - Slide

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iris - iris Ring-shaped coloured part of your eye surrounding the pupil.
pupil - pupil Opening in the iris.
cornea - hoornvlies A transparent layer in the front of your eye that covers the iris and the pupil.
lens - lens Part of the eye behind the pupil that helps to focus light rays into a clear, sharp image.
retina - netvlies A thin layer of light-sensitive cells in the back of your eye.
cones - kegeltjes Light-sensitive cells in the retina that allow you to see colours in bright light.
cones - kegeltjes Light-sensitive cells in the retina that allow you to see colours in bright light.
rods - staafjes Light-sensitive cells in the retina that allow you to see grey or black-and-white images in dim light.

fovea -  gevoeligste deel van het netvlies The most sensitive part of the retina, right across from the lens, which contains many cones.
optic nerve - oogzenuw The nerve of the eye that transmits nerve impulses to the brain.
blind spot - blinde vlek The spot where the optic nerve enters the eye; it does not contain light-sensitive cells.
sclera - (harde) oogvlies The white, outer covering of the eye.
vitreous body - glasachtig lichaam Jelly-like fluid inside the eye which helps give the eye its shape.
ciliary muscle - kringspier (in het oog) Muscles that control the shape of the lens.
short-sighted - bijziend, kortzichtig Objects close by are seen more clearly than objects far away.
long-sighted - verziend Distant objects are clearer than objects close by.


5.3 Seeing

Slide 38 - Slide

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5.4 Hearing

Slide 39 - Slide

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auricle = pinna

Slide 40 - Slide

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Inwendig oor
Steps to hearing sounds
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Slide 41 - Slide

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sound is picked up by the auricle
air in the auditory canal vibrates
The eardrum vibrates
Hammer and anvil vibrate
the stirrup vibrates
fluid in the cochlea vibrates
sensory cells are being stimulated
impulses are made
the auditory nerve brings impulses to the brain
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Slide 42 - Drag question

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The ears

Slide 43 - Slide

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Eustachian tube

Eustachian tube connects to your nasal cavity/throat

Pronounce: (yoo·stay·kee·uhn·choob)

Slide 44 - Slide

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SENSE
SENSE ORGAN
STIMULUS
SENSORY 
RECEPTOR
nerve cells
Hearing
Sound waves
Ear
Convert stimuli into nerve impulses
Transport nerve impulses 
Form a connection between the senses and the brain

Slide 45 - Drag question

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outer ear -  buitenoor The outermost part of the ear: from the pinna to the eardrum.
middle ear - middenoor Middle part of the ear: from the eardrum to the stirrup.
inner ear - binnenoor Innermost part of the ear: from the stirrup to the auditory nerve.
pinna -  oorschelp Funnel-shaped part of the outer ear made of skin and cartilage.
ear canal  -  gehoorgang Tube inside the ear that directs sound from the pinna to the eardrum.
eardrum - trommelvlies The membrane of the middle ear, which vibrates in response to sound waves.
hammer - hamer (botje in het oor) Tiny bone in the middle ear that picks up the vibration from the eardrum.
anvil - aambeeld (botje in het oor) Tiny bone in the middle ear that picks up the vibration from the hammer.


stirrup - stijgbeugel (botje in het oor) Tiny bone in the middle ear that picks up the vibration from the anvil and sends it ot the cochlea.
cochlea - slakkenhuis (deel van het oor) Shell-shaped hollow tube of the inner ear where sensory receptors convert vibrations into nerve impulses.
auditory nerve - gehoorzenuw The nerve of the ear that transmits nerve impulses to the brain.
Eustachian tube 
buis van Eustachius Tube that connects the middle ear to the throat.
semicircular canals - halfronde buisjes (in het oor) Part of the inner ear that detects the direction of movement and acceleration and helps to maintain your balance.

5.4 Hearing

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5.5 Smell

Slide 47 - Slide

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Olfactory cells

Slide 49 - Slide

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Mucus
Dust and germs get trapped
Cilia (little hairs) move it up your nose an throat

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5.5 Smell
nasal cavity 
neusholte Hollow area inside your nose and part of your skull.

olfactory cells 
reukcellen (in je neus) Sensory receptors high up in the nasal cavity that can detect many different odours.

Slide 51 - Slide

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5.6 Taste

Slide 52 - Slide

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The Tongue:
Tongue is covered with taste buds.
Chemicals in your food and drink dissolve, this is is how your taste buds detect the taste.

Slide 53 - Slide

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tongue
   taste bud
mucus gland       nerve cells
taste bud
sensory cell      


nerve cells

Slide 54 - Slide

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5.6 Taste
taste buds 
smaakpapillen Specialised sensory receptors covering your tongue.

umami 
de vijfde basissmaak (naast zoet, zuur, zout en bitter) An essential chemical that all living things need to survive; it is found in meat, seafood, tofu, tomatoes and aged cheese.

Slide 55 - Slide

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