This GCSE Biology quiz takes much a closer look at the central nervous system. Specifically it looks at the junctions between nerve cells - the synapses, where neurotransmitters relay signals between neurons.
The bodies of animals, humans included, are equipped with two messaging systems, hormones and neurons (nerve cells). Hormones are carried in the bloodstream and are slower but longer lasting messengers. Messages in neurons are electrical and so they travel much faster but are short lived. Neurons vary in size from microscopic to up to a metre in length and many need to be joined together to enable messages to travel from one part of the body to another via the central nervous system.
The nervous system, including the brain, consists of chains and networks of neurons. Where neurons meet, there is a small gap called a synapse - synapses are junctions between one neuron and another. In order for a message to transfer from one neuron to the next, the signal must cross the synapse between them. In most cases, this is achieved by the use of chemicals called neurotransmitters.