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The cerebrum has four pairs of lobes lobes. The two frontal lobes control behavior and language production, and is also called the motor cortex. The two parietal lobes, are also called the sensory cortex, and they process input from our senses. The temporal lobes process auditory information, language comprehension, and the sense of taste. The occipital lobes process visual input. The cerebellum is responsible for gross and fine body movements, and coordination.
The four lobes of your brain are the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, and the temporal lobe. The frontal lobe is the lobe that deals with your personality... how your express yourself through language, your motor skills, and how you reason. The parietal lobe deals with your sense of pressure, pain, and what you physically feel. The occipital lobe is the lobe that deals with your sense of sight, and it is what understands the information that is sent from your retinas. Lastly, the temoral lobe is what helps people to hear and interperet sounds and understand language.
cebrum-parietal lobes
Rats must have a good sense of smell in order to locate food.
The sense of smell originates from the first cranial nerves (the olfactory nerves), which sit at the base of the brain's frontal lobes, right behind the eyes and above the nose. Inhaled airborne chemicals stimulate these nerves.
The cerebrum has four pairs of lobes lobes. The two frontal lobes control behavior and language production, and is also called the motor cortex. The two parietal lobes, are also called the sensory cortex, and they process input from our senses. The temporal lobes process auditory information, language comprehension, and the sense of taste. The occipital lobes process visual input. The cerebellum is responsible for gross and fine body movements, and coordination.
The sense of smell is controlled by the olfactory nerves.
There are four lobes of the brain, they are:Frontal lobe-conscious thought; damage can result in mood changesParietal lobe-plays important roles in integrating sensory information from various senses, and in the manipulation of objects; portions of the parietal lobe are involved with visuospatial processingOccipital lobe-sense of sight; lesions can produce hallucinationsTemporal lobe-senses of smell and sound, as well as processing of complex stimuli like faces and scenes.
The four lobes of your brain are the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, and the temporal lobe. The frontal lobe is the lobe that deals with your personality... how your express yourself through language, your motor skills, and how you reason. The parietal lobe deals with your sense of pressure, pain, and what you physically feel. The occipital lobe is the lobe that deals with your sense of sight, and it is what understands the information that is sent from your retinas. Lastly, the temoral lobe is what helps people to hear and interperet sounds and understand language.
Midbrain
sensation
Common sense would be associated with the pre-frontal lobes.
occipital bone i think
The olfactory lobes of a pig are very large. This is important so that the pig can use its sense of smell effectively.
cebrum-parietal lobes
The thalamus, occipital lobe, parietal lobe, and temporal lobe all play parts in visual perception. Most of the processing of visual information occurs in the occipital lobes. If you want to find out if you are left occipital lobe oriented or right occipital lobe orientated, you can try this simple experiment. With both eyes open, look at a small spot on a wall or ceiling across the room from you. Then use one hand and touch the thumb and index fingers together and hold it about arm's length away in front of you and then place the circle you made with your fingers over the spot and alternate closing one eye at a time. You will notice that you can only see the spot with one eye open. It will be the left or the right eye. This shows your dominant vision tendency and whether you prefer to use your left or right eye more.
The parietal is mainly involved in spatial reasoning and sense, when you have to mentally rotate an object you are using this area. The occipital is involved in visual processing