Question 9
Differentiate between:
(a) Myelinated and non-myelinated axons
(b) Dendrites and axons
(c) Rods and cones
(d) Thalamus and Hypothalamus
(e) Cerebrum and Cerebellum
(a) Myelinated and non-myelinated axons
| Myelinated axons |
| Non-myelinated axons |
1. | Transmission of nerve impulse is faster | 1. | Transmission of nerve impulse is slower |
2. | Myelinated axon has a myelin sheath. | 2. | Myelin sheath is absent |
3. | Node of Ranvier is present between adjacent myelin sheaths. | 3. | Node of Ranvier is absent |
4. | Found in the brain, the spinal cord, the cranial and spinal nerves | 4. | Found in autonomous and somatic neural systems |
5. | Schwann cells are observed inside the myelin sheath | 5. | Schwann cells are not observed inside the myelin sheath |
(b) Dendrites and axons
| Dendrites |
| Axons |
1. | Dendrite is a small projection arising from the neuron. It conducts the nerve impulse toward the cell body. | 1. | Axon is a single, long projection that conducts the nerve impulse away from cell body to the next neuron. |
2. | Nissl’s granules are present in dendrites. | 2. | Nissl’s granules are absent from axons. |
3. | Dendrites are always non-myelinated. | 3. | Axons can be myelinated or non-myelinated. |
(c) Rods and cones
| Rods |
| Cones |
1. | Rods help in twilight vision. | 1. | Cones help in colour vision. |
2. | They have visual purple pigment called rhodopsin. | 2. | They have visual violet pigment called iodopsin. |
3. | Rods are the photoreceptor cells of the retina that are sensitive to dim light. | 3. | Cones are the photoreceptor cells of the retina that are sensitive to bright light. |
(d) Thalamus and Hypothalamus
Thalamus | Hypothalamus |
Thalamus is the part of the forebrain that receives nerve impulses of pain, temperature, touch, etc., and conducts them to the cerebral hemisphere. | Hypothalamus is the part of the forebrain that controls involuntary functions such as hunger, thirst, sweating, sleep, fatigue, sexual desire, temperature regulation, etc. |
(e) Cerebrum and Cerebellum
Cerebrum | Cerebellum |
It is the part of the forebrain that controls voluntary functions. It is the place where intelligence, will power, memory, etc., reside. | It is the part of the hindbrain that controls voluntary functions and controls the equilibrium. |