D312 Nervous System Lab Questions and Explanations
Student Name
Western Governors University
D312 Anatomy and Physiology I with Lab
Prof. Name
Date
D312: Anatomy and Physiology I with Lab
Lab Questions – Section 5: Nervous System
This section addresses key structural and functional principles of the nervous system, integrating anatomical identification with physiological relevance. Each question is presented as embedded within the instructional content, followed by direct answers and expanded explanations to support conceptual understanding. Tables are used where comparisons or matching are required. The content has been rewritten to maintain academic integrity while preserving APA-style formatting and terminology.
Central Nervous System Components
Which structures are part of the central nervous system? (Select three answers.)
The central nervous system (CNS) consists of structures responsible for processing and integrating information. It excludes nerves that extend into the periphery.
| Option | Structure | Evaluation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | Somatic nerves | Incorrect | Somatic nerves belong to the peripheral nervous system (PNS) and transmit voluntary motor and sensory signals. |
| b | Medulla oblongata | Correct | This brainstem region regulates vital autonomic functions such as respiration and heart rate and is part of the CNS. |
| c | Pons | Correct | The pons serves as a relay center within the brainstem and facilitates communication between major brain regions. |
| d | Spinal cord | Correct | The spinal cord is a core CNS structure that conducts sensory and motor information between the brain and body. |
Answer: Medulla oblongata, pons, and spinal cord.
Neuronal Structure and Function
Parts of a Neuron
Understanding neuron anatomy is essential for explaining how nervous tissue transmits information. Each labeled component plays a specialized role.
| Label | Neuron Component | Description |
|---|---|---|
| A | Terminal arborizations | Branched endings of the axon that form synaptic contacts with target cells through synaptic knobs. |
| B | Axon | A long, singular extension that conducts electrical impulses away from the cell body. |
| C | Soma | The neuron’s cell body, containing the nucleus and organelles required for metabolic maintenance. |
| D | Dendrites | Short, branching processes that receive incoming signals and convey them toward the soma. |
Which part of a neuron carries information to other neurons, muscles, glands, or lymphatic tissue?
| Option | Structure | Evaluation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | Axon | Correct | The axon propagates action potentials away from the soma to communicate with effector cells. |
| b | Soma | Incorrect | The soma integrates signals but does not transmit impulses to other cells. |
| c | Cell body | Incorrect | Another term for soma, responsible for metabolism rather than signal transmission. |
| d | Dendrites | Incorrect | Dendrites receive incoming signals rather than sending them outward. |
Answer: Axon.
Cerebrum Language Areas
Cerebrum Labeling
Language comprehension and speech production are localized to distinct cortical regions.
Area A: Broca’s area
Area B: Wernicke’s area
Lobes of the Cerebrum and Associated Functions
Which lobe corresponds to each neurological function?
| Question | Primary Function | Correct Lobe | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Motor speech, reasoning, and planning | Executive control and speech production | Frontal lobe | Contains Broca’s area and governs voluntary motor activity, decision-making, and planning. |
| Sensory association and spatial awareness | Integration of tactile and positional input | Parietal lobe | Processes somatosensory information via the postcentral gyrus. |
| Visual interpretation | Visual perception and processing | Occipital lobe | Houses primary and associative visual cortices. |
| Hearing, smell, emotion, learning, memory | Auditory processing and memory formation | Temporal lobe | Includes auditory cortex, Wernicke’s area, and memory-related structures. |
Cerebral Circulation and Metabolism
Which arteries supply the brain?
The brain receives oxygenated blood from paired arterial systems to ensure continuous perfusion.
Answer: Bilateral internal carotid arteries and bilateral vertebral arteries.
What is the only source of energy for the brain?
Neural tissue relies almost exclusively on one metabolic substrate under normal physiological conditions.
Answer: Glucose.
Which substances can cross the blood–brain barrier?
Certain small or lipid-soluble molecules are capable of diffusing across the blood–brain barrier.
Answer: Alcohol, anesthetics, and glucose.
Cerebrospinal Fluid and Spinal Cord Anatomy
Which structure produces cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)?
| Option | Structure | Evaluation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | Dural sinuses | Incorrect | Function in venous drainage rather than CSF production. |
| b | Choroid plexus | Correct | Specialized capillary networks within the ventricles that secrete CSF. |
| c | Meninges | Incorrect | Protective connective tissue layers surrounding the CNS. |
| d | Pia mater | Incorrect | Thin meningeal layer adhering to the CNS, not secretory. |
Answer: Choroid plexus.
Where is gray matter located in the spinal cord?
| Option | Structure | Evaluation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | Dorsal horn | Correct | Contains gray matter responsible for processing sensory input. |
| b | Dorsal column | Incorrect | Composed of white matter tracts. |
| c | Ventral column | Incorrect | Primarily associated with motor output pathways. |
| d | Central canal | Incorrect | A CSF-filled space, not neural tissue. |
Answer: Dorsal horn.
Synapses, Glial Cells, and Neural Organization
Electrical synapses (gap junctions) are characteristic of which tissues?
Electrical synapses allow rapid, synchronized activity.
Answer: Cardiac muscle and smooth muscle.
Which term describes a bundle of axons in the peripheral nervous system?
| Option | Term | Evaluation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | Ganglion | Incorrect | Refers to collections of neuron cell bodies in the PNS. |
| b | Nerve | Correct | A nerve is a bundle of axons located in the PNS. |
| c | Tract | Incorrect | A bundle of axons within the CNS. |
| d | Nucleus | Incorrect | A cluster of neuron cell bodies in the CNS. |
Answer: Nerve.
Which glial cell functions as the resident macrophage within the CNS?
| Option | Cell Type | Evaluation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | Astrocyte | Incorrect | Provides metabolic and structural support but is not immune-focused. |
| b | Schwann cell | Incorrect | Myelinates axons in the PNS. |
| c | Microglia | Correct | Acts as the primary immune defense cell within the CNS. |
| d | Satellite cell | Incorrect | Supports neuron cell bodies in PNS ganglia. |
Answer: Microglia.
What is a neural synapse?
| Option | Description | Evaluation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | CSF-filled brain cavity | Incorrect | Describes a ventricle. |
| b | Peripheral neuron cell body cluster | Incorrect | Defines a ganglion. |
| c | Specialized communication junction | Correct | A synapse enables signal transmission between neurons or effector cells. |
| d | CNS axon bundle | Incorrect | Refers to a tract. |
Answer: A specialized junction mediating communication between neurons.
References
Marieb, E. N., & Hoehn, K. (2022). Human anatomy & physiology (12th ed.). Pearson Education.
OpenStax. (2023). Anatomy and physiology. Rice University. https://openstax.org/books/anatomy-and-physiology
D312 Nervous System Lab Questions and Explanations
Tortora, G. J., & Derrickson, B. H. (2023). Principles of anatomy and physiology (16th ed.). Wiley.
Get WGU Free BSN Samples
NURS2000
D235
C784
D269
D268
D312
- D312 Chapter 1 – Summary Seeley’s Anatomy and Physiology
- D312 Lab 3: Mitosis, Meiosis, and Cancer – Pre/Post Lab Insights
- D312 Lab Week 2 – Comparative Study of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells
- D312 Section 3 Lab Questions on Skeletal Anatomy and Structure
- D312 Nervous System Lab Questions and Explanations
- D312 Final Exam Review Practice Questions and Answers
D198
- C273 Foundations & Major Theories
- D198 Course Notes: Historical, Social, and Cultural Contexts
- D198 Task 3: Analyzing “Sex Machine” in Global Arts & Humanities
- D198 Task 2 Analysis on Lichtenstein’s Art
- D198 Task 2 – Reflection on Ansel Adams’ “Church, Taos Pueblo”
- D198 Task 1 – Analysis of Racial Themes in Hughes & Brooks’ Poems
D266
- D266: World History Task Three – British & Vietnamese Colonization Insights
- D266: World History Task One – Empires, Cultures, and Religion
- D266 Task 3 Performance Assessment: British Empire & Indian Independence
- D266 Task 2 Human Actions in the Spread of Disease
- D266 Task 1: The Spread of Christianity and Islam