Coordination - The Linking system
Sharpening of a pencil, grasping a door knob, walking or running, driving, and a few physical actions, all involve well-coordinated movements made with well balanced postures. In fact, whenever we move the three basic functions, such as movement, balance, and coordination they work together to perform purposeful motions of body parts.
This is actually quite a feat, because moving is a complex process for the body. Even standing upright is a difficult challenge of balancing on just two feet with a narrow base. Yet, it is common for us not only to stand upright easily and apparently, effortlessly but also while keeping our balance to perform many other functions.
A response as an effect of a change in the environment of the organism or signals of change or ‘stimuli’.All living organisms respond to stimuli. The cat may be running because it saw a mouse. Plants grow towards the sunshine. We start sweating when it is hot and humid.
Each nerve cell consists of a cell body with a prominent nucleus. There are fine projections mainly of two types extending from the cell body of the nerve cell.
From stimulus to response In the holding stick activity you observed that there is coordination between eye and finger.
Afferent (or ferrying towards) which carry messages towards the central nervous system (spinal cord or brain) from nerve endings on the muscles of different sense organs that sense the change in surroundings are called stimulus detectors. These are also called ‘sensory’ nerves.
Efferent (or ferrying away) which carry messages from the central nervous system to parts that shall carry out the response or the effectors (nerve endings). They are also called ‘motor’ nerves
Association nerves, which link together the afferent and efferent nerves.
• What other functions do you think needed in coordination and balance? All our functions are carried out by an effort of several systems working together. For example, while movement, we hardly ever use just the skeletal system or muscular system alone, several other systems also have their own roles to play. Even within the muscular system, several muscles work in a sequence or at once.
• What triggers movement of the muscles? It is a kind of pathway involving the way that our organs, tissues and cells work. All of them pick up signals of change from their surroundings and respond to them. This process triggers different functions in our body as well as by our body. For example, it is natural to move to a side of the road when we hear or see a car approaching
Coordination
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