No. The 'message' is carried by the auditory nerve to the brain.
nerves
Depending on the type of neuron, it can take anywhere from 1 to 200 miles per hour to carry a message.
Yes, waves do carry sound.
waves carry by energy and the energy is gravatational
it carry by its conductor transfer in the thing that charging
The auditory nerve carries auditory impulses to the brain.
the auditory nerve pathways carry impulses to the auditory cortices in the ?
Sensory nerve fibers carry message to brain. A part of neuron or or single neuron does not carry this message to the brain.
No. Nerves are not blood-filled. They are a bundle of fibers that carry information from parts of your body back to your brain, where your brain then processes that information.
Nerve cells
Temporal lobes.
the spinal cord is connected to your brain. When you move their is a message to your brain to move.
The cochlea is the inner ear. It transforms sound into a message the nerves can carry to the brain.
The sensory (or afferent) neuron carries messages to the brain and then the motor (or efferent) neuron carries the reaction message from the brain to the gland or muscle being effected in response. :)
Depending on where the "message" originates, it would generally be the periphrial nervous system carrying the message to the central nervous system, which is then processed by the appropriate neurons in the brain. The class of these nerves are the "efferent" nerves.
The nerve endings in the skin carry that message to the brain straight from the wounded area.
it is your nearves just like they carry messages to your brain. only when they get to your brain your brain tells them to go to the muscle that needs the message