homeostasis - body's maintenance of a stable environment
receptors - molecule or cell that provides information about the environment
control center
... [Show More] (and set point) - indicates correct value (e.g. body temp)
effectors - What elicits a response that alters conditions within the body's internal environment. (e.g.
muscles and glands)
negative feedback - When receptors measure deviations from the set point, effectors are activated and
conditions are returned toward the set point and effectors gradually shut off. This movement toward
homeostasis and balance is called .........
positive feedback - Homeostatic mechanisms that function when changes byeffectors move the body
away from normal conditions, causing more changes, is called...... (examples are blood clotting and labor
contractions)
organelles, cells, tissues, organs, organ systems, organism - Levels of organization
organelle - Cell components that perform a specific function
cells - Basic unit of structure and function
tissues - Groups of cells organized into layers or masses that have specific functions
organs - Structures that perform a specialized function (comprised of tissues)
Organ systems - Groups of organs that function together closely
Organism - Comprised of an interacting organ system
superior - above, or closer to the head
inferior - below, or closer to the feet
Anterior (Ventral) - Toward the front
Posterior (Dorsal) - Toward the back
medial - Toward the midline
lateral - Away from the midline (closer to the sides)
Median (saggital) plane - Imaginary vertical line dividing the body into right and left portions
Coronal/Frontal plane - Imaginary vertical line dividing the body into anterior and posterior portions
Transverse (cross-sectional) - Imaginary horizontal line dividing the body into superior and inferior
Dorsal cavities (near the back) - Cranial and spinal cavity
Cranial cavity - Cavity that contains the brain
Spinal cavity (vertebral) - Cavity that contains the spinal cord and vertebrae
orbits, nasal, oral, thoracic, mediastinum, pericardial, pleural, and abdominopelvic (peritoneal) - Ventral
cavities (near the front of the body)
orbits - Cavity that contains the eyes and associated skeletal muscles and nerves
Nasal cavity - Cavity that is divided into right and left portions by the nasal septum; air-filled sphenoid
and frontal sinuses
Oral cavity - Cavity that contains the teeth and tongue
thoracic cavity - Cavity that contains the lungs (chest cavity)
Mediastinum - Space between the lungs that contains the heart, esophagus, trachea, and thymus
Pericardial cavity - Potential space between the visceral pericardium and the parietal pericardium
middle ear cavities - Cavity containing the incus, malleus, stapes
Pleural cavities (lungs) - Cavities (right and left) that are the potential space between the parietal and
visceral pleural membranes
Abdominopelvic cavity - Cavity that extends from the diaphragm to the floor of the pelvis; includes
stomach, liver, spleen, gallbladder, small and large intestines, urinary bladder, and reproductive organs
Peritoneal cavity - Cavity that is the potential space between the parietal and visceral peritoneal
membranes
Pleural membranes (parietal is the outside layer that lines the cavity, visceral is the inside layer, covering
the lung) - Body cavity membrane: which is a serous membrane that lines the lungs
Pericardial (parietal is the outside layer which lines the mediastinum, visceral is the inside layer, covering
the heart) - Body cavity membrane: which serous membrane lines the heart?
Peritoneal membranes (parietal is the outside layer which lines the cavity, visceral is the inside layer,
lining the organs) - Body cavity membrane: Which serous membrane lines the abdominopelvic cavity?
epithelial, connective, nerve, and muscle tissue - Four major tissue types
epithelial - Which type of tissue is found throughout the body and covers the body, lines organs, found
in the inner lining of body cavities and hollow organs?
epithelial - Which type of tissue always has an apical (free) surface exposed to an open space (inside or
outside)?
basement membrane - What nonliving membrane anchors epithelium to underlying connective tissue?
true - T/F Epithelial cells lack blood vessels, so they are supplied by underlying connective tissues [Show Less]