Imagine your brain is sending messages to your body using tiny messengers called neurotransmitters.
Your nervous system works like a super fast mail service. When you want to move your finger, your brain writes a message and sends it down the nervous system, which is like a network of roads made from special cells called nerve cells or neurons.
How Messages Are Delivered
When the message reaches the end of a nerve cell, neurotransmitters jump across a tiny gap to the next cell. It's like when you throw a ball across the street to your friend, they catch it and run with it. The neurotransmitter is that ball!
These messengers help your body do all kinds of things: laugh, run, think, and even sleep. Sometimes there are too many messages, or not enough, which can make you feel excited, tired, or even a little grumpy.
How It All Connects
Your brain uses neurotransmitters to talk with other parts of your body, like a phone call between friends. Each message helps you do something new, just like how every step in a game helps you win!
Examples
- A neurotransmitter is like a message sent from one nerve cell to another, helping the brain send signals.
- When you touch something hot, neurotransmitters help your brain know it's painful.
- Neurotransmitters let your muscles move when you decide to walk.
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See also
- How Does Every Brain Chemical & Their Effects Explained Work?
- What is Love is influenced by several neurotransmitters in the brain?
- What is acetylcholine?
- What are neurochemical processes?
- What are mood-regulating molecules?