No, it's not uncommon. Answer one is correct, except that my doctor told me years ago that it was actually very common, but for many people the the problem is not significant enough to cause them to ever get it diagnosed or treated. The problem is called "REFERED PAIN," and occurs when a signal traveling along a nerve jumps across a small gap between two adjacent nerve synapses for two different nerves. The electro-chemical signal across a synapse gap can stimulate the receptor for another nerve. It is a weird sensation, but common. j3h.
It is called a feeling of deja vu. Sometimes the sensory feel of a place will 'take you back' to some similar previous experience you've had.
feeling and movement
feeling and movement
The first order sensory neuron can sometimes be a sensory receptor because it is what sends the signal to the brain from the receptor. The second order goes from the brainstem to the thalamus.
The popular answer to this question is because of the "braingasms". The main effect of ASMR is a nice brain tingling feeling, which relaxes you, calms you down and sometimes makes you sleepy.
No, "practical" is not a feeling. It refers to something that is sensible, realistic, and useful in a particular situation. Feelings involve emotions or sensory experiences.
they are used for sensory functions and feeling. They are used to sense the environment around them.
An image based on whats shes sensing, i.e what sensations she is feeling
One reason a child with autism may be more active is that they are craving sensory input, such as running up and down or pinching objects, etc. Another reason may be because they are anxious or distressed by sensory information (eg a ventilation system, or a noisy classroom)
anesthiosisThe medical term for loss of sensation is anesthesia.anethesiaHSAN - which stands for Hereditary Sensory Autonomic Neuropathy. - This is the medical term for not feeling pain.
aA change that makes you react is called a sensory feeling
No, feeling is the sensory perception or experience of emotion. Emotions are complex psychological states that involve a combination of physiological arousal, cognitive interpretation, subjective experience, and behavioral responses. Feeling is just one component of the broader emotional experience.