This chapter is all about how our body and even plants respond to the world around them. It explains how the nervous system helps us control our actions, balance, and react to things like sound, light, touch, taste, and smell. You'll learn how messages travel through our body, how our senses work, and even how plants respond to things like light and touch. The chapter also talks about a disease called ALS and how it affects the body. By the end, you'll understand how our body and brain work together to help us interact with our environment!
The nervous system is the part of an organism that gathers, processes, and responds to information. The basic working units of the nervous system are called nerve cells, or neurons.
A Closer Look: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also called Lou Gehrig's disease, is a condition that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.
- It makes muscles weak and hard to control, and symptoms can include muscle cramps, twitching, weakness, and trouble speaking or swallowing.
- ALS progresses differently for each person and has no cure, but medicine and therapy can help slow it down and ease symptoms.
- About 20,000 people in the United States live with ALS.
- Stephen Hawking, a famous scientist, had ALS and became paralyzed over time but used a computer-based communication system to continue his work.
- He wrote important books like A Brief History of Time and made major contributions to science despite his condition.
Did You Know?
The formula for speed is: Speed (m/s) = Distance (m) / Time (s).
Night Vision Goggle: Would you like to be able to see in the dark?
- Even in the dark, objects give off or reflect infrared light, which humans cannot see.
- Night vision goggles collect infrared light and convert it to visible light.
- Infrared light enters the goggles’ objective lens, is turned into electrons, and sped up in an image intensifier tube.
- The electrons hit a phosphor screen, which converts them back into photons, creating a visible image.
- Owls see better in dim light than humans because they have more rod cells in their retinas, which are sensitive to low light.
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