Class 11 Biology MCQs | Chapter 21: Neural Control And Coordination – Part 2
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Class 11 Biology MCQs | Chapter 21: Neural Control and Coordination – Part 2

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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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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