Graded Potentials Vs. Action Potential

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Graded Potential
- location
- type
- initiated by
- strength
- Dendrites & Cell Body
- Chemically Gated Channels
- Various input signals on dendrites or cell body
- Graded; incremental with distance but able to integrate signals

Action Potential
- location
- type
- initiated by
- strength
- Axon Hillock & Axon Length
- Voltage Gated Na+ and K+ Channels
- Local depolarization by gated channels in dendrite (i.e. graded potential
- All-or-None response once its voltage surpasses threshold
A(n) _____ is the signal that carries information along an axon. (The “signal” is a change in _____. The result of the “signal” is to either excite or inhibit the post-synaptic _____).
- action potential; voltage; neuron
Action Potentials are an all-or-nothing response, meaning…
If a cell reaches threshold a full action potential will occur.

The threshold, maximum voltage, and resting potential do not change.

Conduction is non-decremental (you get a perfect action potential along the whole membrane).

“Information” is frequency, not size of AP (signal depends on how fast a stimulus reaches CNS not the strength of the AP).
How does an action potential travel down the whole axon?
The influx of positive ions (Na+) at a specific point causes some positive ions to travel slightly down the axon. This causes a depolarization further down the cell which triggers another action potential.
What prevents action potential from spreading in both directions on an axon?
The voltage-gated Na+ channels enter a temporary refactory period which prevents backwards depolarization.
What role does size and glia cells play in action potentials?
Larger axons experience less resistance in conducting an action potential down its length.
Glia cells make up the myelin sheath which acts as an insulator. They increase the distance of electrotonic spread in the same amount of time because an action potential and be pushed further down the cell.
Which glia cells are found in the CNS and which in the PNS?
Oligodendrocytes in the CNS
Schwann cells in the PNS
Where are action potentials regenerated?

What type of propagation is this called?

First generated at the axon hillock and then at the nodes of Ranvier which are gaps in the myelin sheath. This is the only place where voltage gated Na+ channels are present.

The jumping between nodes of Ranvier is a termed salutatory conduction.