Instructional Video11:41
SciShow

SciShow Quiz Show: Weird Facts About Humans

12th - Higher Ed
Hank squares off against the host of SciShow Kids, Jessi Knudsen Castaneda, to match wits about chemistry, evolution, and how babies are weird!
Instructional Video1:52
SciShow

Why Do We Blush?

12th - Higher Ed
Aw, don't be embarrassed everyone does it! Quick Questions explains what causes blushing, which Darwin called "the most peculiar and most human of all expressions."
Instructional Video1:54
SciShow

Can Bright Light Make You Sneeze?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow's Quick Questions explains why bright light can make some people sneeze! Really!
Instructional Video2:51
SciShow

How Can a Saw Know What It’s Cutting?

12th - Higher Ed
Table saws, while quite useful for woodworking, are also dangerous machines, which is why some incredible safety mechanisms have been invented to help you remain one with your body parts.
Instructional Video10:01
Crash Course

Peripheral Nervous System: Crash Course A&P

12th - Higher Ed
It is now time to meet the system that helps your crazy brain stay in touch with the outside world. We follow up last week's tour of the central nervous system with a look at your peripheral nervous system, its afferent and efferent...
Instructional Video3:08
Curated Video

Winning and Losing

6th - 12th
See how two boxers fare in a match, and discover how the chemicals in our body influence whether we win or lose. Biology - Being Human - Learning Points. The brain's reaction to winning and losing is hard-wired. When a boxer realises he...
Instructional Video3:01
Curated Video

The Nervous System - Body’s Communication

6th - 12th
Our bodies contain an intricate network of nerves and pathways which make up the Central Nervous System. How are they linked? And how do they connect different parts of our body to control bodily functions? Biology - Being Human -...
Instructional Video2:40
Curated Video

Developing Brain: Baby Brain

6th - 12th
We assume a baby's brain is just a small version of an adult brain, but it's not at all. How babies' brains develop from birth, shaping and being shaped by the world around them. Biology - Being Human - Learning Points. The brain takes...
Instructional Video4:30
Curated Video

GCSE Biology - Nervous System and Reflex Arc #58

9th - Higher Ed
In this video we cover what the nervous system is, how it relies on nerve cells and synapses, and what a reflex arc is.
Instructional Video8:04
The Backyard Scientist

We Made Kids Toys Extra Dangerous

K - 5th
We Made Kids Toys Extra Dangerous
Instructional Video7:11
Catalyst University

RPAs EXPLAINED [Part 2a] | Vestibulospinal Reflex (VSR) & Vestibulocollic Reflex (VCR)

Higher Ed
In this video, we explore the structure and functions of the vestibulospinal and vestibulocollic reflexes, or the VSR and the VCR. This will lead to discussing the hip and step strategies.
Instructional Video3:21
Curated Video

Understanding Reflex Arcs in the Nervous System

Higher Ed
The video is a lesson on reflex arcs and the function of reflex actions in the nervous system. Using a hot pan as an example, the video describes how pain receptors in the skin detect a stimulus, which triggers a series of neuronal...
Instructional Video16:05
Mazz Media

Animal Behavior

6th - 8th
In this information-packed program students will learn about the behavior patterns of all types of animals including mammals, birds, insects and more. From food gathering to mating, survival instincts and sleeping habits to social...
Instructional Video17:54
Catalyst University

Primitive Reflexes Through 1st Year of Life [per NPTE]

Higher Ed
In this video, we explore primitive reflexes in the first year of life that are covered on the NPTE along with their purpose, time of onset, and time of integration.
Instructional Video3:15
Curated Video

The Brain and Motor Control: Understanding How We Move

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In this video, we explore the fascinating control center of our bodies - the brain. We learn about reflexes, motor systems, and the various motor areas in the brain that allow for precise voluntary control. Additionally, we discover the...
Instructional Video6:20
Curated Video

Pressure Reflexes and Mean Arterial Pressure

Higher Ed
What happens when Mean Arterial Pressure goes to high? Baroreceptors fire, signal goes to the medulla, parasympathetic activity goes up, Sympathetic Activity goes down, which ends up resulting in an increase in Mean Arterial Pressure....
Instructional Video8:40
Curated Video

023 How Reflexes Work (Knee jerk and eye blink)

Higher Ed
In this video, my wife helps me to demonstrate how reflexes work at the level of the neurons. We look at both the Knee jerk and eye blink reflexes and the mechanism underlying both.
Instructional Video8:47
Curated Video

How the Nervous System ACTUALLY Works (EASY!)

Higher Ed
The nervous system is the control center of the body. But how does it actually work? In this video, we discuss what the nervous system does, the divisions of the nervous system, and how certain functions (like vision and reflexes) work.
Instructional Video9:12
Professor Dave Explains

The Sensorimotor System and Human Reflexes

12th - Higher Ed
We just learned all about how sensory information from the surroundings makes it to the brain, but once it's there, the brain has to then tell the body what to do to respond to its surroundings. This happens thanks to the sensorimotor...
Instructional Video3:00
Curated Video

Why Do Animals Have Whiskers?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Explore the fascinating function of whiskers in animals. We will learn how whiskers aid vision, serving as touch receptors, and providing a heightened sense of feeling. The whiskers play a crucial role in helping animals navigate their...
Instructional Video3:00
Curated Video

The Importance of Reflexes

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This video explains what reflexes are and how they are involuntary actions of the body in response to stimuli. It highlights various reflexes such as removing the hand from a hot object, blinking, sneezing, coughing, and the patellar...
Stock Footage0:08
Getty Images

Neuromuscular junctions between nerve cells (motor neurons) and a muscle. Nerve signals (green) are transmitted from the nerves to the muscle tissue by the neurotransmitter chemical acetylcholine. This signal causes the muscle to contract

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Neuromuscular junctions between nerve cells (motor neurons) and a muscle. Nerve signals (green) are transmitted from the nerves to the muscle tissue by the neurotransmitter chemical acetylcholine. This signal causes the muscle to contract
Instructional Video10:02
Crash Course

Peripheral Nervous System

9th - 12th Standards
The brain does not feel pain, which is why surgeons can perform brain surgery without anesthesia or while the patient is awake. Pupils see how the peripheral nervous system allows humans to feel pain. The narrator explores the afferent...
Instructional Video12:04
1
1
Crash Course

The Nervous System

9th - 12th Standards
What do you call a brain without one billion neurons? A no-brainer! The narrator of a video about the brain and the differences between the central and peripheral nervous systems walks viewers through both systems, explaining how they...