All-or-none law

In physiology, the all-or-none law (sometimes the all-or-none principle or all-or-nothing law) is the principle that if a single nerve fibre is stimulated, it will always give a maximal response and produce an electrical impulse of a single amplitude. If the intensity or duration of the stimulus is increased, the height of the impulse will remain the same.

Source: Wikipedia — All-or-none law (CC BY-SA 4.0)

All-or-none law

In physiology, the all-or-none law (sometimes the all-or-none principle or all-or-nothing law) is the principle that if a single nerve fibre is stimulated, it will always give a maximal response and produce an electrical impulse of a single amplitude. If the intensity or duration of the stimulus is increased, the height of the impulse will remain the same.

Source: Wikipedia "All-or-none law" · CC BY-SA 4.0

Share this article: X · Bluesky
Privacy Policy