The nervous system is the body’s main control     system. It is made up of the CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM (or CNS) and  a     network of NERVES that extend from the CNS to all parts of the     body. The nervous system regulates both voluntary activities, such  as walking     and talking, and involuntary activities, such as breathing, which  you make no     conscious decisions about.
The  CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. The rest of the     nervous system, called the peripheral nervous system, consists of  nerves. These     include 12 pairs of nerves that branch from the brain (cranial  nerves) and 31     pairs that branch from the spinal cord (spinal nerves).
The  nervous system contains billions of neurons (nerve cells). A     neuron has a cell body, arms called dendrites, and a long projecting  fibre, the     axon. Electrical signals – up to 2,500 per second – can pass     along axons. They can also jump between neurons by means of  chemicals that pass     across the gaps in synapses (neuron junctions).
The main parts of the brain are  the large folded cerebrum, the     brainstem, which forms a stalk at the foot of the brain, the  cerebellum behind     it, and central structures, such as the thalamus.
Nerves  are made up of bundles of the axons of nerve     cells. Some of these carry information picked up by sensory  receptors around     the body to the CNS for processing. Other axons carry messages from  the CNS to     muscles, causing movement, or to the body’s glands, causing the  release     of hormones. Many axons are surrounded by a protective sheath  containing a     fatty substance called myelin. This acts to insulate the axons     electrically.
Most nerves consist of several axon  bundles, called fascicles. The     speed at which individual nerves transmit signals varies depending  on their     thickness and whether or not their axons have myelin sheaths;  fatter,     myelinated axons transmit signals faster, at up to 350 kph (218  mph).
The  CNS has two main tasks. It has to process     information, both about the outside world (obtained by organs such  as the eyes)     and about the inside of the body (obtained by internal receptors).  It also has     to generate responses such as movement that will protect and  maintain the body.     Some activity within the CNS is quite simple REFLEX (automatic)     activity. But much of its activity, particularly in the brain’s     cerebrum, is complex and conscious.
FUNCTIONS OF THE CEREBRAL  CORTEX
The cortex (outer layer) of the cerebrum  has many functions.     Different areas of the cortex are involved in processing or  analysing sensory     information, sending signals to direct muscle movements, or in other  activities     such as reasoning, memory, or creative thought.
The  spinal cord’s main function is to transmit information     between the brain and spinal nerves. It is also involved in some  reflex     activity. Its grey matter is made up of the cell bodies of neurons.  Its white     matter contains axons (neuronal fibres). These are arranged into  groups called     tracts and carry signals up and down the cord.
In  its simplest sense, a reflex is an emergency reaction     of the nervous system to a threat such as a hot object touching the  skin. In a     wider sense, reflexes are automatic responses to a wide range of  situations in     the body and are key to many internal activities, such as the heart  beat. A     division of the nervous system called the autonomic nervous system  is in     overall control of these internal activities.
In  a simple reflex, information passes from the area affected, in     this case the finger, to the central nervous system (red pathway).  This     triggers an immediate response, in this case the contraction of a  muscle (blue     pathway) to withdraw the finger. Here, the reflex action involves  only two     nerves and the spinal cord. However, a signal also passes to the  brain, which     registers the pain.
 
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