In this video, I want
to talk about the action potentials of neurons. Here we have our
neuron with soma in red and a larger than
normal axon in green. And now I've drawn a
myelin sheath in yellow around the axon and a couple
of larger than normal dendrites in blue. And here's our graph with
the membrane potential on the y-axis and
time on the x-axis. And we've been talking about,
in the absence of input, most neurons have
a stable potential across the entire membrane
that I've shown here, which is often around
negative 60 millivolts. And without input,
the resting potential will just stay right there. But excitatory or
inhibitory inputs, which usually come in
through the dendrites, but less often can come into
the soma or the axon itself, will cause changes to
the resting potential that we call graded
potentials that may be either a
depolarization, also called an excitatory potential,
or a hyperpolarization, also called an
inhibitory potential. And these are called
excitatory or inhibitory because they involve movement
to the membrane potential closer to or farther away from
this threshold potential, which is often around
negative 50 millivolts. And we talked about how
these graded potentials decay with both
time and distance, so that as a polarization
from an excitatory input spreads along the membrane, the
size of the graded potential gets smaller--
and the same thing with the a hyperpolarization
caused by an inhibitory input. And we talked about how this
decay, with time and distance, involves how much effect
any of these graded potentials out here
in the dendrites or the soma will
have on the trigger zone at the initial
segment of the axon and that what's usually
needed is multiple excitatory inputs causing
depolarizations to have temporal and
spatial summation so that the size of these
excitatory potentials can be large enough when
they get to the trigger zone of the axon here to push
the membrane of the trigger zone up over this
threshold potential. And if summation of all the
excitatory and inhibitory potentials at any moment in time
brings the membrane potential of the trigger zone right here
up over this threshold value, which is often around negative
50 millivolts, then usually an action potential
will be started here at the trigger zone and
conducted all the way down the axon. Action potentials
being conducted down the axons of neurons
are the way that neurons can transmit information over
a wide range of distances, which may be one meter or more. Action potentials have
some big differences from graded potentials in that
they usually have the same size and duration for any
particular neuron, and they are usually
conducted at the entire length of an axon basically
unchanged, regardless of the distance of that axon. The shape of an action potential
is fairly characteristic. So it starts with summation
of graded potentials getting it to the
threshold value. But then instead of
just decaying back down to the resting potential
like graded potentials do, it has this huge rise
to a very positive membrane potential, where it's become
more positive inside the neuron membrane than outside, which
is the reverse of normal, where normally it's more negative
inside the membrane than outside. After this part that's called
the rising phase of the action potential, it has
a short plateau. Then it has a rapid
falling phase back down to the resting potential. But it actually
doesn't stop there. It keeps going more negative
than the resting potential. Then that plateaus,
and then it has a bit of a slower kind of
return to the resting potential from there. So the exact values may
vary between neurons, but common numbers
are that it might go from around negative 50, if
that's the threshold potential for that neuron, all the way up
to somewhere around positive 40 or so. Then it may come all the way
down to around negative 70 or so before it
kind of more slowly settles back into a
typical resting potential of around negative 60 or so. The total size of
the action potential may vary between neurons, but
for any particular neuron, the size is usually
the same, which is called the all-or-none
property of an action potential. You either get an
action potential or you don't get an action
potential as opposed to graded potentials, where
the size varies depending on the size of the input,
so that if a depolarization leading to an action potential
is just slightly over threshold like this, you'll get
the same-sized action potential as a graded potential
that's way over threshold. It doesn't make any difference
how far over threshold you get. The size of the action potential
will usually be the same. That's the all-or-none
property of action potentials. The duration of an
action potential is also usually consistent
for any particular neuron. It's usually pretty quick,
just a few milliseconds. Graded potentials can
also be pretty fast. They can be a few
milliseconds as well. But they can also be much,
much longer than this. Graded potentials
have a wide range of durations based on the
duration of their inputs. Another big difference is
that action potentials usually do not decay with distance
like graded potentials do. Action potentials
are usually conducted down an axon unchanged no
matter how long the axon is, so that if we look right
here at the trigger zone where the action
potential starts, it'll have this kind of
shape to its waveform. Then if we check maybe
halfway down the axon, it'll have the exact same shape. And then if we check way
down at the end of an axon, even if this is a
meter or more, it'll have the exact same shape again. It doesn't decay with distance. The speed that action potentials
are conducted down axons is often very fast. It can be anywhere
from 1 meter per second to up to 100 meters per second. A couple of things go along
with faster conduction speeds for action potentials. Larger-diameter axons
conduct action potentials faster than
smaller-diameter axons. And myelinated axons-- axons
that have a myelin sheath-- conduct action potentials
faster than axons that don't have a myelin sheath. And that often
goes hand in hand. We usually see myelin sheaths
on larger-diameter axons. With myelinated axons, the
speed an action potential that is conducted down the
axon is not consistent. We actually see that the action
potential is conducted faster through the myelinated
segments than through the gaps between the myelinated segments
called the nodes of Ranvier, so that if we look here
at the trigger zone, the action potential travels
a little slower through there and then much more
quickly through this myelinated segment. And then it travels
a little more slowly through that
node of Ranvier, then much faster through
this next myelinated segment. This phenomenon is called
saltatory conduction. And this word "saltatory"
comes from a Latin word for jumping because the
action potential appears to jump from node to
node instead of having a nice, smooth conduction
along the axon.