Answer: Skin; Brain, GSA - General Somatic Afferent
Explanation:
<em>Whilst bushwalking, Brian begins to feel chafing sensation in his thighs. In order to perceive this chafing, neural impulses must travel in one direction – from his </em><em><u>skin</u></em><em> to his </em><em><u>brain</u></em><em>. This information would travel via </em><em><u>GSA </u></em><em>neurones.</em>
The peripheral mechanoreceptors which are found on the skin and used to detect movement will detect the chafing and send it to the brain.
This information will be received by the brain through General Somatic Afferent neurons which are spread across the body and have the primary function of detecting touch and temperature.
<span>A chronic or persistent disorder of the mental processes caused by brain disease or injury and marked by memory disorders, personality changes, and impaired reasoning is considered progressive and irreversible, an acutely disturbed state of mind characterized by restlessness, illusions, and incoherence, occurring in intoxication, fever, and other disorders and coma have the potential for reversal, and depression and anxiety are reversible</span>
Kiwi<span> or </span>kiwis<span> are flightless birds native to New Zealand, in the </span>genus<span> Apteryx and </span>family<span> Apterygidae.</span>
Parents pass genes to their offspring; the genes program cells to make specific enzymes and other proteins, whose cumulative action produces an individual’s inherited traits.
Answer:
Explanation:
In eukaryotic cells, the membrane that surrounds the nucleus — commonly called the nuclear envelope — partitions this DNA from the cell's protein synthesis machinery, which is located in the cytoplasm.