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Reflex actions

A reflex action is a protective, automatic and rapid response to a stimulus.

It follows the same general sequence as a normal reaction but often it does not involve the brain. Instead, the spinal cord coordinates the response so the impulse can reach the effector quickly.

The nerve pathway followed by a reflex action is called a reflex arc. The process is:

stimulus → receptor → → → motor neurone → effector → response

A withdrawal reflex can occur when you accidentally touch something hot.

Diagram of a hand hovering over a burning flame. A cross-section of the spinal cord shows how a reflex action imoves the hand away. A synapse is labelled in two places.
  1. Receptor cells in the skin detect a stimulus (the heat from the candle).
  2. Sensory neurone sends impulses to relay neurone in the spinal cord.
  3. The relay neurone connects to the motor neurone (and also sends a message to the brain).
  4. sends impulses to effector.
  5. produces a response (muscle contracts to move hand away).

The pupil reflex

The amount of light entering the eye is controlled by a . The size of the changes in response to bright or dim light. This is controlled by the muscles of the .

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 2, Diagram showing how the human eye reacts to dim light., 1. How an eye reacts to dim light

This reaction is:

  • protective - it prevents harmful bright light from damaging the receptor cells at the back of the eye
  • involuntary - you don’t have to think about it, it happens automatically
  • rapid – it happens very quickly

Try it - in a bright room, ask someone to close their eyes for 30 seconds. When they open their eyes, observe how quickly their pupils react.

Impulse pathway - Higher tier only

Once the stimulus is detected the following process occurs.

  1. A receptor cell passes an electrical impulse along the .
  2. The sensory neurone reaches the , the CNS.
  3. The sensory neurone connects to a relay neurone, via a synapse, inside the CNS.
  4. The relay neurone connects to a , via a synapse, inside the CNS.
  5. The motor neurone leaves the CNS and the impulse is carried to the effector.

Question

Scientists have studied how fast a neurone can transmit an electrical impulse in frogs. They use this equation.

\(\text{speed}~=~\frac{\text{distance}}{\text{time}}\)

They measured the length of the neurone as 50 mm = 0.05 m and measured the time the impulse took to travel the length of the impulse as 1.5 ms (millisecond) = 0.0015 s.

Calculate the speed of the impulse in m/s to two decimal places.