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Q1. Voluntary actions are based on:
Decision makingVoluntary actions are deliberate, goal directed behaviors that require conscious thought and decision making in the brain (specifically the fore brain). Digestion and hunger are involuntary processes; reflex arcs are automatic and do not involve conscious choice. Therefore, decision making is the basis of voluntary actions.
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Q2. Medulla is part of the:
Hind brainThe medulla oblongata (often called medulla) is located in the hind brain, along with the pons and cerebellum. It controls vital involuntary functions such as breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure. The fore brain includes the cerebrum and thalamus; the mid brain is a small region between the fore brain and hind brain.
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Q3. The thinking tissue of the body consists of:
Dense networks of neuronsThinking, memory, and consciousness are functions of the brain, which is composed of dense networks of interconnected neurons (nerve cells). Muscle fibers contract, blood cells transport oxygen, and “few neurons” would be insufficient for complex thought. The vast number and intricate connections of neurons enable cognition.
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Q4. Reflex actions occur without:
ThinkingReflex actions are rapid, automatic responses that do not involve conscious thought. They still use neurons (sensory, motor, and interneurons) and cause movement by stimulating muscles. Thinking is a higher brain function that is bypassed in a reflex arc to save time.
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Q5. A reflex action is a response that occurs:
Without thinking or controlReflex actions are involuntary and occur without conscious thought or deliberate control. They are hardwired neural pathways that produce a quick response to a stimulus. Plants do not have neurons, sleep is not required, and careful thinking would defeat the purpose of speed.
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Q6. Jumping away from a bus suddenly is an example of:
Reflex actionJumping away from an approaching bus is an automatic, rapid response to a dangerous stimulus (the sight or sound of the bus). It occurs without conscious decision, making it a reflex action. Learning involves experience, growth movements occur in plants, and voluntary action would be too slow in this situation.
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Q7. Sensory impulses are received mainly by the:
Fore brainSensory impulses from various parts of the body are ultimately received and interpreted by the fore brain (specifically the cerebrum). The spinal cord relays impulses but does not interpret them; the cerebellum coordinates movement; the hind brain controls autonomic functions. Conscious sensation occurs in the fore brain.
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Q8. Nerves from all over the body meet in the:
Spinal cordThe spinal cord is a major cable of nerves that runs through the vertebral column. It receives sensory nerves from the body and sends out motor nerves. While nerves also connect to the brain, the statement “nerves from all over the body meet” describes the spinal cord as a central collecting point. The brain is the higher centre, but the spinal cord is the initial meeting point for most peripheral nerves.
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Q9. Writing and talking are examples of:
Voluntary actionsWriting and talking are deliberate, learned behaviors that require conscious effort and decision making. They are controlled by the brain’s motor areas and involve fine muscle coordination. They are not growth movements, involuntary (like heartbeat), or reflexes (like knee jerk).
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Q10. Thinking before reacting to heat may cause:
DelayIf you think before pulling your hand away from a hot object, the neural signal must travel from the sensory area to the fore brain, be processed, and then return to motor areas. This takes additional time compared to a spinal reflex, which bypasses the brain. Thus, thinking introduces a delay, which could lead to injury.
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Q11. Precision of voluntary actions is controlled by:
CerebellumThe cerebellum coordinates voluntary movements, ensuring they are smooth, balanced, and precise. It receives input from the motor cortex and sensory systems and fine tunes muscle activity. The medulla controls involuntary functions, the fore brain initiates the movement, and the spinal cord transmits signals but does not refine precision.
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Q12. The fluid around the brain helps in:
Shock absorptionCerebrospinal fluid (CSF) surrounds the brain and spinal cord, acting as a cushion that protects neural tissue from mechanical shock or injury. It also provides some buoyancy and removes waste, but its primary protective role is shock absorption. Growth, digestion, and nutrition are not its main functions.
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Q13. A reflex arc is a connection between:
Input and output nervesA reflex arc is the neural pathway that mediates a reflex action. It typically involves a sensory (input) nerve, an interneuron (in the spinal cord or brainstem), and a motor (output) nerve. The connection between input and output nerves allows a rapid response without direct brain involvement. Blood vessels, brain heart connections, or two muscles are not correct descriptions.
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Q14. Nervous tissue causes action mainly through:
Electrical impulsesNervous tissue communicates via electrical impulses (action potentials) that travel along neurons. These impulses trigger neurotransmitter release, leading to muscle contraction or gland secretion. Hormones are chemical messengers of the endocrine system, blood flow transports substances, and digestion is unrelated.
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Q15. If all actions required thinking, touching a hot object would:
Cause burnsReflex actions like withdrawing from heat are fast because they do not involve the brain. If thinking were required, the delay would mean the hand remains on the hot object longer, leading to severe burns. Reflexes exist precisely to prevent such damage. Thus, requiring thinking would cause burns.
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Q16. Feeling full after eating is controlled by a centre in the:
Fore brainThe sensation of fullness (satiety) is regulated by the hypothalamus, which is part of the fore brain. It receives signals from the stomach and gut hormones. The mid brain is involved in visual/auditory reflexes, the spinal cord in relay, and the hind brain in autonomic functions like breathing, but not directly in satiety.
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Q17. Walking and cycling require the:
CerebellumWalking and cycling are coordinated voluntary movements that depend heavily on the cerebellum for balance, rhythm, and fine motor control. The spinal cord relays signals, the medulla controls vital functions, and the fore brain initiates the action, but precision and coordination come from the cerebellum.
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Q18. Separate areas in the fore brain are specialised for:
Sense organsThe fore brain (cerebrum) has distinct sensory areas – visual (occipital lobe), auditory (temporal lobe), somatosensory (parietal lobe), etc. – that process information from sense organs. Respiration is controlled by the medulla, digestion by the autonomic nervous system, and growth by hormones.
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Q19. The brain is the main centre for:
CoordinationThe brain integrates sensory information, initiates responses, and coordinates all body activities – voluntary and involuntary. While the medulla controls respiration, excretion is handled by kidneys, and growth by hormones, the overarching role of the brain is coordination of functions.
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Q20. Information in reflex action also reaches the:
BrainEven in a spinal reflex, sensory neurons send a branch of the signal upward to the brain via the spinal cord. This allows the brain to become aware of the stimulus (e.g., feeling pain after withdrawing the hand). The stomach, lungs, and heart are not directly involved in receiving this information.
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Q21. Even in humans, reflex arcs are useful because they are:
Efficient for quick responsesReflex arcs provide the fastest possible response to a stimulus by bypassing the brain’s thinking centres. This efficiency protects the body from harm (e.g., pulling hand from flame). They are not slow, not necessarily painful, and not random – they are predictable and rapid.
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Q22. Signals reach the brain through:
NervesSensory signals travel from receptors to the brain via nerve fibres (axons) that form peripheral nerves. Blood carries hormones but not electrical impulses; bones and muscles do not transmit sensory information to the brain.
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Q23. Reflex actions are responses to:
Environmental changesReflex actions are triggered by stimuli from the environment (e.g., heat, sharp object, bright light). They are adaptive responses to external changes. Sleep, internal growth, and age are not immediate stimuli that evoke reflexes.
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Q24. Cerebellum helps in maintaining:
Balance and postureThe cerebellum receives input from the vestibular system (inner ear), proprioceptors, and motor cortex to maintain balance, posture, and coordinated movement. Breathing and blood pressure are controlled by the medulla; digestion by the autonomic nervous system.
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Q25. Many animals depend mainly on reflex arcs because they have:
Little or no thinking abilitySimpler animals (e.g., insects, worms) rely heavily on reflex behaviours because they lack a complex brain for conscious decision making. Reflex arcs provide rapid, automatic responses essential for survival. Strong muscles alone do not enable reflexes; complex brains would reduce reliance on reflexes.
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Q26. Touching a flame is considered:
An urgent and dangerous situationFlame contact causes tissue damage and pain, making it an urgent and dangerous stimulus. The body’s reflex withdrawal is an emergency response. It is not safe, normal, or slow – it is hazardous and requires immediate action.
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Q27. The spinal cord is protected by the:
Vertebral columnThe vertebral column (backbone) consists of vertebrae that enclose and protect the spinal cord. The skull protects the brain, the rib cage protects the heart and lungs, and the pelvis protects reproductive organs.
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Q28. The central nervous system consists of:
Brain and spinal cordThe central nervous system (CNS) is anatomically defined as the brain and spinal cord. Nerves outside the CNS form the peripheral nervous system. The heart and muscles are not part of the CNS.
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Q29. Signals from brain reach muscles through:
NervesMotor signals from the brain travel via motor neurons (which are part of nerves) to skeletal muscles, causing contraction. Skin is a sensory organ, blood transports hormones, and hormones are slower chemical messengers – not the primary route for rapid muscle commands.
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Q30. Reflex arc connections are formed in the:
Spinal cordMost simple reflex arcs (e.g., knee jerk, hand withdrawal) are formed at the level of the spinal cord, where sensory neurons connect directly or via interneurons to motor neurons. Some cranial reflexes involve the brainstem, but the classic reflex arc is spinal. Heart and lungs are not involved.
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Q31. The main thinking part of the brain is the:
Fore brainThe fore brain, especially the cerebrum, is responsible for conscious thought, reasoning, memory, and decision making. The hind brain controls basic life functions, the mid brain processes sensory reflexes, and the spinal cord relays signals.
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Q32. Reflex arcs evolved because:
Brain is not fast enoughReflex arcs provide a shorter, faster pathway than sending signals all the way to the brain and back. The brain’s processing, though fast, introduces a delay. Evolution favoured reflex arcs for emergencies because the brain’s speed is insufficient to prevent injury in fractions of a second.
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Q33. The thinking part of the brain is located in:
Forward end of the skullThe fore brain (cerebrum) lies in the anterior part of the cranial cavity (forward end of the skull). The spinal cord is in the backbone, abdomen contains digestive organs, chest contains heart and lungs.
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Q34. Pulling the hand back from a flame happens:
ReflexlyHand withdrawal from a flame is a classic reflex action – it occurs automatically and very quickly without conscious planning. It is not slow, not during digestion, and not planned – it is reflexly.
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Q35. Cranial nerves arise from the:
BrainCranial nerves (12 pairs) emerge directly from the brain (specifically the brainstem and fore brain). Spinal nerves arise from the spinal cord. Skin and muscles are not origins of nerves.
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Q36. A quicker way to respond to danger is:
Reflex actionReflex actions are the fastest neural responses, bypassing conscious thought. Sleeping would prevent any response, growth is slow, and thinking deeply delays action. Thus, reflex action is the quickest way.
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Q37. Blood pressure and vomiting are controlled by:
MedullaThe medulla oblongata in the hind brain contains centres that regulate blood pressure, heart rate, breathing, and vomiting. The spinal cord relays signals, cerebellum coordinates movement, and fore brain handles conscious thought.
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Q38. The backbone is also called the:
Vertebral columnThe backbone is the common name for the vertebral column, a series of vertebrae that encloses the spinal cord. The skull protects the brain, the sternum is the breastbone, and the rib cage protects the thoracic organs.
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Q39. Association areas of fore brain are involved in:
Interpreting sensory informationAssociation areas in the cerebral cortex (fore brain) integrate and interpret sensory information, linking it to memory and meaning. They are not directly involved in reflex action (spinal/brainstem), breathing (medulla), or blood circulation.
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Q40. Reflex actions mainly help in:
Quick responseThe primary advantage of reflex actions is their speed. They enable the body to react almost instantly to harmful stimuli, protecting from injury. Delayed or slow responses would be detrimental, and growth is unrelated.
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Q41. Spinal nerves arise from the:
Spinal cordSpinal nerves (31 pairs) emerge from the spinal cord through spaces between vertebrae. They carry sensory and motor signals between the spinal cord and the rest of the body. The brain gives rise to cranial nerves, not spinal nerves.
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Q42. Involuntary actions are mainly controlled by:
Mid brain and hind brainInvoluntary actions (e.g., heartbeat, breathing, salivation, pupil dilation) are controlled by the mid brain and hind brain (especially the medulla and pons). The cerebrum and fore brain are associated with voluntary actions. The spinal cord controls some reflexes but not the majority of involuntary actions.
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Q43. Actions like heartbeat and salivation are:
InvoluntaryHeartbeat and salivation occur automatically without conscious effort or planning. They are regulated by the autonomic nervous system and the hind brain. They are not conscious, planned, or voluntary.
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Q44. Decisions made in the fore brain are passed to:
Motor areasAfter decision making in the fore brain’s association areas, signals are sent to motor areas (motor cortex) which then generate commands to muscles via the spinal cord. The spinal cord is the pathway, but the immediate recipient of the decision is the motor areas. Heart and sensory areas are not correct.
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Q45. The brain is protected by a:
Bony boxThe brain is encased in the skull, a bony box that provides rigid protection. Additionally, cerebrospinal fluid cushions it, but the primary protective structure is bone. Skin and muscle alone would not be sufficient.
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Q46. Communication between CNS and body is done by:
Peripheral nervous systemThe peripheral nervous system (PNS) consists of nerves that connect the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) to the rest of the body, carrying sensory and motor signals. The digestive, respiratory, and circulatory systems have different primary functions.
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Q47. The brain has how many major parts?
ThreeThe brain is divided into three major parts: fore brain (cerebrum, thalamus, hypothalamus), mid brain, and hind brain (pons, medulla, cerebellum). Sometimes people count five lobes, but the major anatomical divisions are three.
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Q48. The spinal cord is part of the:
Central nervous systemThe central nervous system (CNS) consists of the brain and spinal cord. The spinal cord is not part of the peripheral nervous system – the PNS includes nerves and ganglia outside the CNS.
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Q49. Thinking involves:
Complex nerve impulse interactionsThinking is a higher cognitive function resulting from intricate patterns of electrical and chemical signalling across vast networks of neurons. It involves many neurons and synapses, not a single neuron or muscle contraction. Nerve impulses are essential.
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Q50. The three major parts of the brain are:
Fore brain, mid brain, hind brainAnatomically, the brain is divided into three major divisions: fore brain (prosencephalon), mid brain (mesencephalon), and hind brain (rhombencephalon). “Brain, spinal cord, nerves” describes the nervous system; “cerebrum, cerebellum, spinal cord” mixes brain parts with spinal cord; “head, neck, trunk” are body regions.
