What is a Synapse?
Interactive Video
•
Social Studies, Biology, Health Sciences, Chemistry, Science
•
11th Grade - University
•
Medium
Wayground Content
Used 1+ times
FREE Resource
Read more
7 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
What is the role of the synaptic cleft in neuron communication?
It generates action potentials.
It stores neurotransmitters.
It is the site of electrical synapse formation.
It is the gap where signals are transmitted between neurons.
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Which type of synapse allows for direct ionic current transfer between cells?
Chemical synapse
Electrical synapse
Presynaptic terminal
Postsynaptic terminal
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
What is the primary function of vesicles in chemical synapses?
To inhibit synaptic transmission
To generate electrical signals
To store and release neurotransmitters
To form gap junctions
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
How do neurotransmitters like glutamate affect the postsynaptic cell?
They inhibit the cell from firing.
They excite the cell to generate an action potential.
They block ion channels.
They decrease the cell's electrical potential.
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
What is the main difference between NMDA and AMPAR receptors?
NMDA receptors are found only in inhibitory synapses.
Both receptors allow positively charged ions to move in and out of the cell.
NMDA receptors allow fast responses, while AMPAR receptors are slower.
NMDA receptors are inhibitory, while AMPAR receptors are excitatory.
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
What effect does GABA have on the postsynaptic cell?
It excites the cell to fire an action potential.
It makes the cell more positive.
It inhibits the cell from firing by making it more negative.
It has no effect on the cell's electrical potential.
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Why is inhibitory signaling important in the brain?
It prevents the brain from sending too many signals at once.
It increases the speed of signal transmission.
It enhances the excitatory signals.
It has no significant role in brain function.
Similar Resources on Wayground
8 questions
Why Tickle Fights Aren’t Just for Kids
Interactive video
•
11th Grade - University
6 questions
Can Dogs See Color?
Interactive video
•
11th Grade - University
6 questions
Why Can Severe Pain Make You Vomit?
Interactive video
•
11th Grade - University
6 questions
What is Action Potential?
Interactive video
•
11th Grade - University
6 questions
Meet the Jellybots: Ocean-Exploring Biohybrid Robots
Interactive video
•
11th Grade - University
8 questions
How to make your food 30x more delicious
Interactive video
•
KG - University
8 questions
Your Microbiome and Your Brain
Interactive video
•
11th Grade - University
8 questions
Venomous Mammals, Sensory Receptors & the Moon's True Origin Story
Interactive video
•
11th Grade - University
Popular Resources on Wayground
10 questions
Ice Breaker Trivia: Food from Around the World
Quiz
•
3rd - 12th Grade
20 questions
Halloween Trivia
Quiz
•
6th - 8th Grade
25 questions
Multiplication Facts
Quiz
•
5th Grade
4 questions
Activity set 10/24
Lesson
•
6th - 8th Grade
22 questions
Adding Integers
Quiz
•
6th Grade
10 questions
How to Email your Teacher
Quiz
•
Professional Development
15 questions
Order of Operations
Quiz
•
5th Grade
30 questions
October: Math Fluency: Multiply and Divide
Quiz
•
7th Grade
Discover more resources for Social Studies
17 questions
Elections Vocabulary MMS
Quiz
•
8th - 12th Grade
39 questions
Unit 7 Key Terms
Quiz
•
11th Grade - University
20 questions
Research Methods Quiz
Quiz
•
12th Grade
17 questions
Government and Civics Worksheet Extraction
Quiz
•
12th Grade
10 questions
Spanish-American War
Quiz
•
11th Grade
20 questions
Americanism: Federal review
Quiz
•
10th - 12th Grade
6 questions
CFA #4
Quiz
•
12th Grade
12 questions
Unit 7: World War II
Quiz
•
11th Grade