Welcome to the Quiz!

This quiz contains 18 questions from a mix of 1 subtopics.

What is homeostasis? 

Maintaining a stable internal environment despite changing conditions 

Changing an internal environment within the body

Maintaining a constant external environment

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Why does the body need to maintain optimal conditions?

For slow enzyme action and cell function

To kill pathogens

For optimal enzyme action and cell function

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Which of these are considered 'internal conditions'?

(Select all that apply)

Room temperature

Blood glucose concentration 

Blood pH

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True or false? Homeostasis ensure internal conditions stay exactly constant, they don't fluctuate at all. 

True

False

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Which of these are considered 'external conditions'?

(Select all that apply)

Room temperature 

Blood oxygen concentration 

The amount of fluids you drink

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effector / receptor


Homeostasis relies on automatic control systems. 


In what order are signals passed along the control system? 


 âž” coordination centre âž”

receptor
effector

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What is the role of a receptor? 

Carries out the response 

Interprets changes and organises a response 

Detects changes in the internal or external environment 

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What is the role of a coordination centre? 

Detects changes in the internal or external environment 

Interprets changes and organises a response 

Carries out the response 

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Where are the coordination centres located in the body?

(Select all that apply)

Skin

Muscles 

Brain

Spinal cord

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Name the two types of effectors and state what they do.

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Is the nervous system or the endocrine system faster acting? 

Nervous

Endocrine 

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Which system acts more generally across the body, the nervous system or the endocrine system? 

Endocrine 

Nervous

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Homeostasis relies on a system of , meaning whenever the levels of something get too high they're brought back down, and whenever the levels of something get too low, they're brought back up. 

negative
feedback

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If our body temperature gets too high, negative feedback will cause our temperature to:

It won't do anything 

Decrease back down

Increase further 

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Diagram illustrating negative feedback loop with arrows indicating the process around a human figure.

How does negative feedback work?

Any change in a system causes an action that amplifies the change

Any change in a system causes an action that reverses the change

Stops any changes from taking place

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What is the role of effectors? 

Detect changes in the internal or external environment 

Interpret changes and organises a response 

Carry out the response 

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What type of feedback does homeostasis depend on?

Positive feedback

Negative feedback

No feedback

Inverse feedback

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The body controlling water levels an example of what?

Homeostasis 

Osmosis

Adaptation 

Evolution

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