An axon (from ; also called a nerve fiber or fibre) is a long slender projection of a nerve cell or neuron found in most animals that typically conducts electrical impulses known as action potentials away from the nerve cell body. The function of the axon is to transmit information to different neurons, muscles, and glands. In certain sensory neurons (pseudounipolar neurons), such as those for touch and warmth, the axons are called afferent nerve fibers and the electrical impulse travels along these from the periphery to the cell body and from the cell body to the spinal cord along another bra
An axon is a long, thin extension of a nerve cell that conducts electrical signals away from the nerve cell body to transmit information to other neurons, muscles, and glands. These structures are essential for communication throughout the nervous system, allowing your body to process sensations and coordinate responses.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
via Wikipedia infobox
An axon (from ; also called a nerve fiber or fibre) is a long slender projection of a nerve cell or neuron found in most animals that typically conducts electrical impulses known as action potentials away from the nerve cell body. The function of the axon is to transmit information to different neurons, muscles, and glands. In certain sensory neurons (pseudounipolar neurons), such as those for touch and warmth, the axons are called afferent nerve fibers and the electrical impulse travels along these from the periphery to the cell body and from the cell body to the spinal cord along another branch of the same axon. Axon dysfunction can be the cause of many inherited and many acquired neurological disorders that affect both the peripheral and central neurons. Nerve fibers are classed into three typesgroupA nerve fibers, groupB nerve fibers, and groupC nerve fibers. GroupsA andB are myelinated, and groupC is unmyelinated. These groups include both sensory fibers and motor fibers. Another classification groups only the sensory fibers into four categories: TypeI, TypeII, TypeIII, and TypeIV.
An axon is one of two types of cytoplasmic protrusions from the cell body of a neuron; the other type is a dendrite. Axons are distinguished from dendrites by several features, including shape (dendrites often taper while axons usually maintain a constant radius), length (dendrites are restricted to a small region around the cell body while axons can be much longer), and function (dendrites receive signals whereas axons transmit them). Some types of neurons have no axon and transmit signals from their dendrites. In some species, axons can emanate from dendrites known as axon-carrying dendrites. No neuron ever has more than one axon; however, in invertebrates such as insects or leeches, the axon sometimes consists of several regions that function more or less independently of each other.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).