Biology, asked by scientist1234, 1 year ago

Explain Central Neural Systems. In detail

Answers

Answered by ROCKSTARgirl
1
\huge{\mathcal{\purple{\boxed{HELLO \: DEAR!!}}}}

________________________\huge\boxed{\texttt{\color{white}{\fcolorbox{red}{black} {Answer is }}}}____

The central nervous system (CNS) controls most functions of the body and mind. It consists of two parts: the brain and the spinal cord. The brain is the center of our thoughts, the interpreter of our external environment, and the origin of control over body movement.

\huge{\boxed{\boxed{\boxed{\boxed{\boxed{\boxed{\boxed{\boxed{\mathfrak{Hope\: it \:Helps!!!!!}}}}}}}}}}

ROCKSTARgirl: so.....sorry
ROCKSTARgirl: what no...
Answered by MrCombat
1
The central nervous system consists of the brain and spinal cord. It is referred to as "central" because it combines information from the entire body and coordinates activity across the whole organism.
The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord.

The brain is protected by the skull (the cranial cavity) and the spinal cord travels from the back of the brain, down the center of the spine, stopping in the lumbar region of the lower back.

The brain and spinal cord are both housed within a protective triple-layered membrane called the meninges.

The central nervous system has been thoroughly studied by anatomists and physiologists, but it still holds many secrets; it controls our thoughts, movements, emotions, and desires. It also controls our breathing, heart rate, the release of some hormones, body temperature, and much more.

The retina, optic nerve, olfactory nerves, and olfactory epithelium are sometimes considered to be part of the CNS alongside the brain and spinal cord. This is because they connect directly with brain tissue without intermediate nerve fibers.



Similar questions