The peripheral nervous system is like the messengers that help your body talk to your brain and back again, fast and friendly.
Imagine you're playing tag with your friends in the park. When someone shouts "You're it!" you hear them, and then you run. That’s because of the peripheral nervous system, which sends messages from your ears (or eyes or skin) all the way to your brain, and then tells your legs to move.
How It Works
The peripheral nervous system has two main types of messengers:
- Sensory nerves, These are like the helpers who bring news from your toes, fingers, or even your belly to your brain. They tell you when something is hot, cold, tickly, or sore.
- Motor nerves, These are like the drivers who take messages from your brain and deliver them to your muscles so you can move, like jumping, running, or even smiling.
Together, they help you feel the world around you and react to it, just like a super team of messengers working hard every day!
Examples
- A person feels a touch on their hand because the peripheral nervous system sends a signal to the brain.
- When you step on a hot stove, your leg moves away quickly due to nerve signals from the peripheral nervous system.
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See also
- How Does 2-Minute Neuroscience: Parasympathetic Nervous System Work?
- What is neuroanatomy?
- What are motor neurons?
- What are efferent neurons?
- Could We Upload Our Consciousness To A Computer?