You are very much welcome @Soso-khokho Games. Glad you got value from it. Make sure to subscribe to the channel, because I have a lot more content like this coming to help you understand how the human body works 👍🏽.
Wow! this is so great and I love it! I will follow this page to study and I will share it with friends! I was trying to study and I came across this page.
Thank you again for this info session. Can you give a talk about phantom limb pain and nerve regeneration? I would like to know what the effects of vitamin B-12 are on nerve regeneration over time. Thanks and stay safe.
Just subscribed. I absolutely love you and your explanations. If there was a way I give give unlimited likes I would. Thank you for creating your chanel
Thank you very much, @pr2747. I appreciate the compliment. My main goal here is to be helpful. If you haven't already, make sure to subscribe to the channel because I have a lot more content like this coming to help you understand how the human body works.
Nice video! But I have a question: the original stimulus e.g. a pinch, something hot or the thought to move a muscle works the same way that you describe in the video as for creating the action potential?
It all depends on what aspect of the stimulus you're talking about. For you to feel a touch or something hot, there are receptors that transmit signals from mechanical stimulation or heat and action potentials are transmitted to specific parts of the spinal cord and brain (CNS). The detection of the stimulus is a specific process that depends on the type of receptor, but the signal that gets sent to the CNS gets sent via action potentials and that process is like what I described. And if you have a thought to move a muscle, those happen via motor neurons that send signals in this same way to the muscle fibers.
You're very much welcome, Erika. Glad you found the video helpful. Make sure to subscribe to the channel, because I have a lot more content like this coming to help you understand how the human body works.
Thank you so much!! You have no idea how hard I was trying to understand the action potential before I watched this video!
You are very much welcome @Soso-khokho Games. Glad you got value from it. Make sure to subscribe to the channel, because I have a lot more content like this coming to help you understand how the human body works 👍🏽.
Wow! this is so great and I love it! I will follow this page to study and I will share it with friends! I was trying to study and I came across this page.
Thanks, Amanda. Glad to hear the video was helpful. Thanks for subscribing and sharing it with friends. You're awesome.
Thank you again for this info session. Can you give a talk about phantom limb pain and nerve regeneration? I would like to know what the effects of vitamin B-12 are on nerve regeneration over time. Thanks and stay safe.
This video reviewing action potential was helpfull. Thank you!
You are very much welcome, Krista. Glad to help you out. Make sure to subscribe for more.
Thank you for that amazing session ...sir plz go more deeper so that we would be able to understand more clearly .
.
You're welcome. That's the plan.
Just subscribed. I absolutely love you and your explanations. If there was a way I give give unlimited likes I would. Thank you for creating your chanel
Thanks so much Iman 👍🏽
Thank you!!!
Excellent video :)
Thank you very much, @pr2747. I appreciate the compliment. My main goal here is to be helpful. If you haven't already, make sure to subscribe to the channel because I have a lot more content like this coming to help you understand how the human body works.
@@InteractiveBiology Subscribed! :D thank you for your work!
Nice video! But I have a question: the original stimulus e.g. a pinch, something hot or the thought to move a muscle works the same way that you describe in the video as for creating the action potential?
It all depends on what aspect of the stimulus you're talking about. For you to feel a touch or something hot, there are receptors that transmit signals from mechanical stimulation or heat and action potentials are transmitted to specific parts of the spinal cord and brain (CNS). The detection of the stimulus is a specific process that depends on the type of receptor, but the signal that gets sent to the CNS gets sent via action potentials and that process is like what I described. And if you have a thought to move a muscle, those happen via motor neurons that send signals in this same way to the muscle fibers.
Love this
Why thank you 😀
Thanks
Sir I want to be like you competency based
Thank you!!!
You're very much welcome, Erika. Glad you found the video helpful. Make sure to subscribe to the channel, because I have a lot more content like this coming to help you understand how the human body works.