action potential
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A rapid, temporary change in the electrical potential across a cell membrane: An "action potential" is a fundamental electrical signal in excitable cells like neurons and muscle cells. It is a brief, self-propagating reversal of the membrane potential that travels along the cell.
- The mechanism for transmitting nerve impulses: It is the primary means by which information is communicated within the nervous system and to muscles.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- The neuron fired an action potential. (The neuron generated and propagated this specific electrical signal.)
- The propagation of the action potential along the axon is very fast. (The travel of this electrical signal along the nerve fiber is rapid.)
- Researchers measured the action potential in the muscle cell. (Scientists recorded the characteristic voltage change in the muscle cell.)
Advanced Usage
- "To generate/initiate an action potential": To trigger the start of this electrical event, typically when a stimulus depolarizes the membrane to a threshold voltage.
- Sodium ions rushing into the cell help generate the action potential.
- "The refractory period following an action potential": The brief period after an action potential during which the cell cannot immediately fire another one.
- During the refractory period, the neuron cannot generate a new action potential.
Variants and Related Words
- Depolarization (n): The phase of the action potential where the membrane potential becomes less negative, moving toward a positive value.
- Repolarization (n): The phase where the membrane potential returns to its negative resting value after depolarization.
- Hyperpolarization (n): A temporary state where the membrane potential becomes more negative than the resting potential.
- Threshold potential (n): The critical level of depolarization required to initiate an action potential.
Synonyms
- Nerve impulse: Often used interchangeably, though "nerve impulse" can refer more broadly to the signal, of which the action potential is the electrochemical component.
- Spike (informal in neuroscience): A colloquial term for the sharp peak of an action potential on a graph.
Related Phrases
- "All-or-none" principle: A key property of the action potential stating that it either occurs fully if the threshold is reached, or does not occur at all.
- The action potential follows an all-or-none principle; there is no partial signal.
- "Propagate an action potential": To describe the action potential traveling along the membrane.
- The myelinated sheath allows the axon to propagate the action potential more efficiently.
Noun
- the local voltage change across the cell wall as a nerve impulse is transmitted