101. Why is saltatory conduction faster than conduction in a non-medullated fibre?
ⓐ. because the impulse is generated only once and never renewed
ⓑ. because the signal moves through blood vessels surrounding the axon
ⓒ. because every part of the membrane depolarises at the same time
ⓓ. because depolarisation occurs mainly at nodes rather than along the entire axon length
Correct Answer: because depolarisation occurs mainly at nodes rather than along the entire axon length
Explanation: In a medullated fibre, the myelin sheath prevents continuous depolarisation over the whole membrane. Instead, electrical changes are regenerated mainly at the nodes of Ranvier. This means fewer membrane regions need to undergo the full ionic process, so conduction becomes much faster. In non-medullated fibres, the impulse must pass continuously through successive adjacent regions, which takes more time. The speed advantage therefore comes from the pattern of conduction, not from blood flow or a one-time signal event. Saltatory conduction is efficient because the impulse leaps between active nodes.
102. Which structure is most directly associated with saltatory conduction in a myelinated axon?
ⓐ. synaptic vesicle
ⓑ. node of Ranvier
ⓒ. dendritic spine
ⓓ. cell nucleus
Correct Answer: node of Ranvier
Explanation: The node of Ranvier is a small gap between adjacent segments of myelin sheath along a myelinated axon. These nodes are crucial because they are the sites where the membrane is exposed and ionic exchange occurs more actively. During saltatory conduction, the impulse is regenerated at these nodes and appears to jump from one node to the next. The nucleus and dendrites are important parts of the neuron, but they are not the structures mainly responsible for this type of rapid conduction. The nodes are therefore central to saltatory transmission.
103. What is a synapse?
ⓐ. the swollen region of a neuron containing the nucleus
ⓑ. the insulating covering wrapped around a nerve fibre
ⓒ. the functional junction between two neurons or between a neuron and an effector
ⓓ. the central canal through which cerebrospinal fluid flows
Correct Answer: the functional junction between two neurons or between a neuron and an effector
Explanation: A synapse is the site where one neuron communicates with another neuron or with an effector such as a muscle or gland. It is not simply a structural extension of one cell, but a functional junction designed for signal transfer. Synapses are essential because neurons are not usually fused into one continuous conducting line. Information must be passed from one cell to the next at these specialized junctions. Understanding synapses is important because neural signaling involves not only conduction along neurons, but also transmission across these communication points.
104. Which statement best describes an electrical synapse?
ⓐ. It transmits signals by neurotransmitter release into a wide synaptic cleft
ⓑ. It passes signals directly through close cellular connections with very little delay
ⓒ. It functions only between neurons and endocrine glands in vertebrates
ⓓ. It always produces one-way transmission because receptors are present on one side
Correct Answer: It passes signals directly through close cellular connections with very little delay
Explanation: In an electrical synapse, adjacent cells are very closely linked, allowing ionic current to pass directly from one cell to another. Because the signal does not depend on release and diffusion of a neurotransmitter across a synaptic cleft, transmission is extremely fast. This makes electrical synapses useful where quick communication is required. They differ from chemical synapses in both structure and mechanism. The central idea is direct electrical transfer through close cell-to-cell contact rather than indirect signaling through released chemical messengers.
105. Which feature best distinguishes a chemical synapse from an electrical synapse?
ⓐ. transmission across a chemical synapse depends on neurotransmitter release
ⓑ. transmission across a chemical synapse occurs without any gap between cells
ⓒ. transmission across a chemical synapse always moves through myelin segments
ⓓ. transmission across a chemical synapse takes place only inside the spinal cord
Correct Answer: transmission across a chemical synapse depends on neurotransmitter release
Explanation: A chemical synapse works by releasing a neurotransmitter from the presynaptic terminal into the synaptic cleft. That chemical messenger diffuses across the gap and binds to receptors on the postsynaptic membrane, producing a new response. This distinguishes it clearly from an electrical synapse, where current passes more directly between closely connected cells. The presence of neurotransmitter release, synaptic vesicles, and a synaptic cleft are all key features of chemical transmission. This mechanism also explains why chemical synapses are generally slower than electrical ones.
106. In a chemical synapse, the small gap between the presynaptic and postsynaptic membranes is called the:
ⓐ. neural canal
ⓑ. nodal interval
ⓒ. synaptic cleft
ⓓ. myelin gap
Correct Answer: synaptic cleft
Explanation: The synaptic cleft is the tiny space between the terminal of the presynaptic neuron and the membrane of the postsynaptic cell. In a chemical synapse, neurotransmitters are released into this gap and then diffuse across it. This space is important because it shows that the two cells are not directly continuous at the point of transmission. The existence of the synaptic cleft helps explain the indirect nature of chemical communication. The signal must be converted from an electrical event to a chemical one and then back again across this narrow junction.
107. Why is transmission across a chemical synapse generally slower than across an electrical synapse?
ⓐ. because the action potential must be converted into neurotransmitter-based signaling across the cleft
ⓑ. because the postsynaptic membrane contains no proteins to receive the signal
ⓒ. because conduction along the axon stops permanently at the synaptic terminal
ⓓ. because chemical synapses can function only in non-medullated fibres
Correct Answer: because the action potential must be converted into neurotransmitter-based signaling across the cleft
Explanation: Chemical synaptic transmission involves several steps. The arriving action potential causes neurotransmitter release, the chemical diffuses across the synaptic cleft, and then receptors on the postsynaptic membrane are activated. Because this process includes more events than direct electrical transmission, it introduces a slight delay. In electrical synapses, ionic current passes more directly between cells, making transmission faster. The slowing in chemical synapses is therefore not due to absence of receptors or permanent stopping of conduction. It comes from the extra conversion and diffusion steps involved in the signaling process.
108. Which statement about the direction of transmission is most accurate for a typical chemical synapse?
ⓐ. It is usually bidirectional because neurotransmitters are released equally from both sides
ⓑ. It is usually unidirectional because transmitter release and receptor arrangement are specialized on opposite sides
ⓒ. It is always random because both membranes depolarise at the same moment
ⓓ. It is always reversible because the synaptic cleft stores electrical current temporarily
Correct Answer: It is usually unidirectional because transmitter release and receptor arrangement are specialized on opposite sides
Explanation: In a typical chemical synapse, the presynaptic terminal contains synaptic vesicles that release neurotransmitter, while the postsynaptic membrane contains receptors that receive it. Because these two sides are structurally specialized for different tasks, transmission usually proceeds in one direction only. This creates an organized flow of information through neural circuits. The synapse does not act randomly, and the cleft does not store electrical current. Unidirectional chemical transmission is therefore a consequence of the unequal structural arrangement of the two sides of the synapse.
109. Which comparison between electrical and chemical synapses is correct?
ⓐ. Electrical synapses use neurotransmitters, whereas chemical synapses use direct ionic flow
ⓑ. Electrical synapses are generally faster, whereas chemical synapses involve a synaptic cleft and transmitter release
ⓒ. Electrical synapses are always one-way, whereas chemical synapses are always two-way
ⓓ. Electrical synapses occur only in muscles, whereas chemical synapses occur only in sensory neurons
Correct Answer: Electrical synapses are generally faster, whereas chemical synapses involve a synaptic cleft and transmitter release
Explanation: Electrical synapses are usually faster because the signal passes more directly between closely connected cells. Chemical synapses, in contrast, depend on release of neurotransmitter into a synaptic cleft and activation of receptors on the next cell. This makes them mechanistically different and generally a bit slower. The incorrect options reverse these features or make overly rigid claims that are not true. The key contrast is direct electrical transmission versus neurotransmitter-based transmission across a gap. That is the most fundamental comparison between the two synapse types.
110. A student says that myelin sheath and synapse are the same because both help nerve signaling. Which correction is best?
ⓐ. Myelin sheath is a junction between two neurons, whereas synapse is an insulating coat around the axon
ⓑ. Myelin sheath and synapse are both neurotransmitter-filled sacs at the axon terminal
ⓒ. Myelin sheath helps conduction along an axon, whereas synapse is the junction where a signal passes to the next cell
ⓓ. Myelin sheath produces receptors, whereas synapse stores the nucleus of the neuron
Correct Answer: Myelin sheath helps conduction along an axon, whereas synapse is the junction where a signal passes to the next cell
Explanation: Both myelin sheath and synapse are involved in nervous signaling, but they do very different things. The myelin sheath is an insulating covering around the axon and is especially important in speeding impulse conduction in medullated fibres. A synapse, on the other hand, is the communication junction where the signal is transmitted from one neuron to another neuron or effector. Confusing these two structures mixes up conduction within a neuron and transmission between cells. The distinction is essential for understanding how nervous communication is organized.
111. A toxin damages the nodes of Ranvier in a medullated axon but leaves the myelin-covered segments largely intact. Which process would be affected most directly?
ⓐ. regeneration of the impulse at successive nodes
ⓑ. storage of neurotransmitter in the presynaptic membrane
ⓒ. reception of signals by dendritic branches
ⓓ. maintenance of the nucleus in the cell body
Correct Answer: regeneration of the impulse at successive nodes
Explanation: In a medullated fibre, the impulse is not renewed continuously along every part of the membrane. Instead, it is regenerated mainly at the nodes of Ranvier, where the axonal membrane is exposed. If these nodes are damaged, the jumping pattern of saltatory conduction is disrupted. The myelin-covered regions still provide insulation, but the impulse loses its normal active renewal points.
112. Which statement is the best non-example of saltatory conduction?
ⓐ. an impulse appearing to leap between exposed gaps in a myelinated fibre
ⓑ. an impulse being renewed mainly at nodes separated by myelin-covered regions
ⓒ. an impulse moving through a non-medullated fibre by successive adjacent membrane changes
ⓓ. an impulse traveling rapidly because not every small part of the axon depolarises
Correct Answer: an impulse moving through a non-medullated fibre by successive adjacent membrane changes
Explanation: Saltatory conduction is specifically associated with medullated fibres, where the impulse appears to jump from one node of Ranvier to the next. In a non-medullated fibre, the conduction pattern is continuous, meaning each adjacent portion of the membrane becomes active in sequence. That is why option C is the best non-example. The other options all describe essential features of saltatory conduction.
113. Assertion: Chemical synapses usually transmit signals in one direction. Reason: Neurotransmitter is released from the presynaptic side, while receptors are concentrated on the postsynaptic side.
ⓐ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion
ⓑ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, but the Reason does not correctly explain the Assertion
ⓒ. Assertion is true, but the Reason is false
ⓓ. Assertion is false, but the Reason is true
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion
Explanation: A chemical synapse has structural polarity. The presynaptic terminal contains synaptic vesicles that release neurotransmitter, while the postsynaptic membrane is specialized to receive the chemical signal through receptors. Because the two sides are not built the same way, transmission usually proceeds in only one direction. The reason directly explains the assertion by linking unidirectional flow to the unequal organization of the synapse. This is a very important principle in understanding how neural pathways maintain ordered signal flow.
114. A student observes two neighboring cells passing a signal with almost no synaptic delay and no obvious neurotransmitter release into a cleft. This observation most strongly suggests:
ⓐ. a damaged chemical synapse
ⓑ. an electrical synapse
ⓒ. a non-medullated axon segment
ⓓ. a resting postsynaptic membrane
Correct Answer: an electrical synapse
Explanation: Electrical synapses are characterized by very rapid transmission because the signal passes directly between closely connected cells. Since there is little or no dependence on neurotransmitter diffusion across a cleft, the delay is extremely small. The absence of obvious chemical release supports this interpretation. In contrast, chemical synapses involve transmitter release, diffusion, receptor binding, and therefore a slight delay. The observation in the question is therefore most consistent with an electrical synapse rather than a typical chemical one.
115. Which comparison best distinguishes conduction from synaptic transmission?
ⓐ. Conduction occurs only in the brain, whereas synaptic transmission occurs only in peripheral nerves
ⓑ. Conduction refers to signal movement along a neuron, whereas synaptic transmission refers to signal transfer between cells
ⓒ. Conduction depends only on neurotransmitters, whereas synaptic transmission depends only on myelin
ⓓ. Conduction occurs only in dendrites, whereas synaptic transmission occurs only in axons
Correct Answer: Conduction refers to signal movement along a neuron, whereas synaptic transmission refers to signal transfer between cells
Explanation: These two ideas describe different stages of nervous communication. Conduction refers to the spread of the electrical impulse along the membrane of a neuron, especially along the axon. Synaptic transmission begins when that signal reaches the terminal and must be passed to another neuron or an effector across a junction. Many students mix these steps together, but they are not identical. One is movement within a cell, while the other is communication from one cell to the next.
116. A researcher compares two axons of equal length. One is medullated and the other is non-medullated. Which outcome is most likely?
ⓐ. the non-medullated axon conducts faster because every part of its membrane participates
ⓑ. the medullated axon conducts faster because the impulse is renewed at intervals rather than continuously
ⓒ. both axons conduct at exactly the same rate because axon length alone determines speed
ⓓ. the medullated axon cannot conduct because myelin blocks all membrane activity
Correct Answer: the medullated axon conducts faster because the impulse is renewed at intervals rather than continuously
Explanation: In a medullated axon, the myelin sheath insulates much of the membrane and allows the impulse to be regenerated mainly at the nodes of Ranvier. This produces saltatory conduction, which is generally faster than continuous conduction in a non-medullated axon. The non-medullated axon must activate successive neighboring membrane regions along its length, which takes more time. Myelin does not stop conduction; it improves efficiency by changing the pattern of conduction. This makes the medullated fibre the faster of the two.
117. Which statement is the strongest misconception about the synaptic cleft?
ⓐ. It is the small space across which neurotransmitter diffuses in a chemical synapse
ⓑ. It lies between the presynaptic and postsynaptic membranes
ⓒ. It is the region where direct continuity between the two cells is absent
ⓓ. It is a gap filled with myelin that speeds saltatory conduction
Correct Answer: It is a gap filled with myelin that speeds saltatory conduction
Explanation: The synaptic cleft is part of a chemical synapse, not part of a myelinated axon. It is a narrow gap between the presynaptic and postsynaptic membranes, and neurotransmitter diffuses across it. Saltatory conduction, however, is related to nodes of Ranvier and myelin sheath along an axon. Mixing these ideas creates a common but major conceptual error. The synaptic cleft is about communication between cells, while myelin-related saltatory conduction is about rapid impulse movement along a neuron.
118. In a neural pathway, the signal travels quickly along a myelinated axon and then slows slightly when it reaches the next cell. What best explains this pattern?
ⓐ. the axon stops conducting once it reaches a synapse
ⓑ. the myelin sheath becomes a receptor surface at the terminal
ⓒ. rapid saltatory conduction is followed by slower chemical transmission across a synapse
ⓓ. electrical synapses always create more delay than axonal conduction
Correct Answer: rapid saltatory conduction is followed by slower chemical transmission across a synapse
Explanation: Along a myelinated axon, the impulse can travel rapidly by saltatory conduction, jumping between nodes of Ranvier. When the signal reaches a typical chemical synapse, it must be converted into neurotransmitter release, diffuse across the synaptic cleft, and activate receptors on the next cell. These extra steps introduce a slight delay compared with conduction along the axon.
119. Which feature would best identify a chemical synapse rather than an electrical one in a diagram?
ⓐ. closely apposed cells allowing direct ion flow
ⓑ. a synaptic cleft with vesicles on one side and receptors on the other
ⓒ. repeated nodes between segments of myelin sheath
ⓓ. a continuous conducting membrane without any junctional gap
Correct Answer: a synaptic cleft with vesicles on one side and receptors on the other
Explanation: A chemical synapse is recognized by its structural asymmetry. The presynaptic side contains synaptic vesicles filled with neurotransmitter, while the postsynaptic side contains receptors that receive the signal. Between them lies the synaptic cleft. Electrical synapses, in contrast, rely on much closer contact and more direct passage of current. The presence of vesicles, receptors, and a cleft therefore strongly points to a chemical synapse. This kind of diagram-based identification is common in exam questions and tests conceptual recognition rather than memorized wording alone.
120. A student says, “Because electrical synapses are fast, they must always be better than chemical synapses.” Which correction is most appropriate?
ⓐ. Chemical synapses are slower, but they are still important because neural communication is not based on speed alone
ⓑ. Electrical synapses are slower, so the statement fails only because the speed comparison is reversed
ⓒ. Chemical synapses and electrical synapses are identical except for the names used in textbooks
ⓓ. Electrical synapses occur only in damaged tissue, so they cannot be compared with chemical synapses
Correct Answer: Chemical synapses are slower, but they are still important because neural communication is not based on speed alone
Explanation: Speed is an important feature, but it is not the only factor that makes a synapse useful in the nervous system. Chemical synapses may be slower than electrical synapses, yet they are widely important for controlled communication between neurons and effectors. The existence of a slight synaptic delay does not make them inferior in every situation. Different synapse types serve different functional roles.