HormonalControl: Nervous Control:
1 Involves Hormones 1 involves impulse
2 Hormones transportd by blood 2 transmitted by neurons
3 Slow Response 3 Immediate response
4 Response can be short lived 4 Response Shortlived
or long lived
5 Always involantry 5 Voluntry or involuntry
6 May affect more than one target 6 Usually Localised
organ
the nervous control is short and snappy and helps to keep the nervous coordinated and the hormonal helps to keep the chemicals coordinated and takes longer to react but last longer.
This process is known as regulation. Nervous or hormonal signals trigger a series of cellular responses within the organ, leading to changes in its activity. This allows the body to maintain homeostasis and respond to internal and external stimuli.
Hormones are distributed through the body by means of blood circulation, and it takes some time for a hormone that is secreted in one location of the body to diffuse through the blood sufficiently that it will reach some other specific location. In comparison, nerve impulses travel very quickly, almost instantaneously as far as our human time scale is concerned.The nervous system responses are electrical while the hormonal responses have to be released into the bloodstream
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The nervous system coordinates and controls body movements and responses.
The nervous system is responsible for transmitting signals between the brain and the rest of the body, allowing for coordination of movement and responses to stimuli.
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hormones
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somatic is voluntary autonomic is involuntary.
nervous nd hormonal systems
Hormonal control involves the release of hormones into the bloodstream by endocrine glands to regulate body functions over a longer period of time. Neural control involves the transmission of electrical signals through the nervous system to regulate rapid responses in the body. Hormonal control is more widespread and slower, while neural control is localized and faster. Both systems work together to maintain homeostasis in the body.