Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Cranial nerve VII
Cranial Nerve seven (CN VII) is also known as the Facial Nerve. Fibers of this nerve exit the skull and course down the jaw (not inside!), with a branch traveling through the middle ear (chorda tympani ). The main fibers of the facial nerve enter the parotid gland and immediately diverge into five branches, remembered by this pneumonic: Ten Zebras Bit My Cat = Temporal, Zygomatic , Buccal , Mandibular , and Cervical; the facial nerve also gives off an Occipital and a Posterior Auricular branch before entering the parotid gland.
The facial nerve (CN VII) is responsible for providing you with two things: facial movements and taste. The major function of CN VII is to supply motor innervation to the muscles of facial expression , allowing you to squint your eyes, raise your eyebrows, and smile. CN VII also monitors the anterior two-thirds of your tongue for taste, including sour, sweet, bitter, and salty tastes. (The Glossopharyngeal nerve / CN IX supplies taste receptors to the posterior one-third of the tongue, and the Vagus nerve / CN X has a few taste receptors on the epiglottis.) A prevelent mistake amoung students of human anatomy is to assume that the facial nerve is responsible for facial sensations; this job is reserved for another cranial nerve (Trigeminal / CN V ), which just so happens to also control the muscles of mastication.
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