Reflex
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
In biology, a reflex, or reflex action, is an unplanned reaction that happens very fast when something touches or startles an animal. Reflexes help animals respond quickly without needing to think.
Reflexes happen in animals that have a nervous system. They work through special paths called reflex arcs. When something touches an animal, a signal goes through these paths to make the animal react fast. Often, these signals do not go to the brain, so the animal can respond quickly.
Many reflexes help keep animals safe. For example, the startle reflex makes an animal jump or move quickly when something sudden happens. Another example is the feline righting reflex, which helps a cat twist its body when falling to land safely. These quick actions help animals stay safe.
Types of human reflexes
A reflex is a quick, automatic response to something that happens around you. It happens without you thinking about it first. Your body uses special paths in the nervous system to make these responses happen very fast.
Some reflexes happen when a muscle is stretched, like when a doctor taps your knee and your leg jumps up. Others happen when something touches a tendon, like a special spot in your arm. Babies are born with many reflexes that help them respond to the world before they learn anything. For example, a baby might grasp your finger when you touch their palm or turn their head when something touches one side of their cheek. These reflexes help babies stay safe and healthy until they can think and learn more.
| Name | Sensory | Motor |
|---|---|---|
| Pupillary light reflex | II | III |
| Accommodation reflex | II | III |
| Jaw jerk reflex | V | V |
| Corneal reflex, also known as the blink reflex | V | VII |
| Glabellar reflex | V | VII |
| Vestibulo-ocular reflex | VIII | III, IV, VI + |
| Gag reflex | IX | X |
Grading
In medicine, reflexes help doctors see how well the nervous system is working. Doctors check how strong a reflex is and give it a number from 0 to 4. A score of 2 or higher is usually normal. Some people may have weaker reflexes, scoring around 1, while others may have stronger reflexes, scoring around 3.
Reflex modulation
Some people think reflexes always work the same way, but they can change to help us move better. For example, when a muscle stretches while we are standing still, it tightens to help us stay balanced. But when we start moving on purpose, this tightening gets weaker so it doesn’t stop us.
We still don’t know everything about how these changes happen, but we know that special cells in our nerves help control reflexes. These changes happen in parts of our spinal cord or nerve system and also get help from signals from our brain.
Other reflexes
Breathing is something we do without thinking, but we can also control it. For example, we can hold our breath by using special muscles in our chest called internal intercostal muscles.
History
The idea of reflexes started in the 1600s with René Descartes. In his work "Treatise on Man", Descartes described how the body can react automatically to things around it without thinking. He compared this to a statue that moves when touched.
Later, in the 1800s, Marshall Hall introduced the term "reflex". He studied how the body makes quick, automatic movements in response to stimuli, using the spinal cord and nervous system instead of the brain's control. Hall shared his findings in a paper from 1833 in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Reflex, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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