tissue made up of many muscle cells and associated connective tissue. There are 3 main muscle types: skeletal, cardiac and smooth
an individual cell that when activated produces force that can lead to motion
the fundamental unit of skeletal and cardiac muscle. Many sacromeres are arranged in sequence within a single myofibril and many myofibrils make up a muscle cell
sacromeres are composed of a highly organized arrangement of myofilaments composed of actin and myosin that interact with each other to generate force (slide across each other)
muscle cell, fascicle, muscle fibers, myofibrils, myofilaments
the binding of actin to myosin myofilaments and change in the conformation of myosin. The cross bridge cycle is the process involving attachment, conformational change and detachment (with ATP) that generates force.
Theory explaining the mechanism of muscle contraction associated with the cross bridge cycling and the sliding of myofilaments past each other to generate force.
neuron that synapses with skeletal muscle cells
is a motor neuron and all the muscle cells that it innervates (controls)
the synapse between a motor neuron and a skeletal muscle cell
an action potential (depolarization followed by repolarization) on the membrane of a skeletal muscle cell
1. Depolarization of a motor neuron (neuronal action potential) - electrical
2. Neurotransmitter release at neuromuscular junction (acetylcholine (ACH)) - chemical
3. Depolarization of muscle fibre - electrical
4. cross-bridge formation and sacromere shortening - mechanical
true
1. motor unit recruitment
2. the action potential frequency (as action potential frequency increases, force increases.
the muscle size, more muscle cells means more sacromeres which causes more force
EMG is a technique to measure electrical activity produced by muscles (measurement of muscle action potentials that occur when a muscle is stimulated
1. skin preperation and proper electrode placement
2. a small needs is inserted into a muscle and the electrical activity is recorded directly
mV, V
time
Yes, as EMg increases, force increases
1. stimulus occurs
2. Sensory - specialized cells in our eyes detect light
Afferent
3. Cortical - the neural information is processed (combined with prior behavioural instructions)
Efferent
4. Motor - an effect is determined
5. muscles are activated to perform the appropriate task
the time it takes the CNS to sense, process and intiate a response to a stimulus
Time it takes for person to execute a specific movement (does not include reaction time). The time from the onset of muscle activation (EMG) to the end of the response.
Reaction time and movement time combined
1. Stimulus intensity and modality (e.g., visual, auditory)
2. Simple reaction time: there is only one stimulas and one response
3. choice reaction time: there are a number of different stimuli presented each requiring a different response
simultaneous performance of two tasks often leads to perfomance deficits in the component task, it is a proff of capacity limitation in cognition