No, they do not. The sense of taste is an example of a chemical sense.
No, smell and taste are the chemical senses. Vision is the sensing of electromagnetic waves in the form of visible light. Hearing is the sense of audible sounds.
Trigeminal nerve
What is your question? Also, humans have more than 5 senses. Besides hearing, vision, taste, smell and touch we can also measure temperature, balance, the position of our limbs, etc.
Cranial and facial bones affect the following senses: senses of vision, taste, smell, hearing and balance. Protection of the brain is done by cranial while facial forms the mechanical framework of the face.
According to a middle school science book Science Explorer Human Biology and Health published by Prentice Hall. It states "Each of your major senses - vision, hearing, balance, smell, taste, and touch...."
No, smell and taste are the chemical senses. Vision is the sensing of electromagnetic waves in the form of visible light. Hearing is the sense of audible sounds.
smell, vision, hearing and touch
vision and hearing
smell, vision, hearing and touch
Raccoons have the same senses as most animals - vision, hearing, taste, smell and touch.
Eagles have touch, smell, hearing, taste, and vision.
General senses are the receptors that are sensitive to pain, temperature, and physical distortion
Trigeminal nerve
Vision, hearing, taste, smell, touch, & internal senses.
1) Vision 2) Touch 3) Taste 4) Hearing 5) Smell
They are hearing, smell, lateral line, pit organs, vision, Lorenzini, touch, and taste.
The Tagalog translations for the five senses are: Paningin (sight/vision) Pandinig (hearing) Pang-amoy (smell) Panlasa (taste) Pakiramdam (touch)