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sympathetic nerve way
A person's sense of smell does not first need to be processed by the Thalamus before entering the Cortex. This is often times why a smell can cause a memory recall faster than other kinds of sensory input.
i do not have any idea of what this could be
cerebellum
I believe it is the thalamus.
organizing and interpreting sensory input.
coding
Comes from the brain cords, they help your brain cells in order to live
They process and relay sensory input from your nose.
Cerebrum.
cerebellum
Wrote to bbc.co.uk on 23.01.06 Q. Is Extra Sensory Perception not an output? -------------------- Extra Sensory Perception (ESP) consists of Intuition, Telepathy and Clairvoyance.In a 'Prism Model' the five senses' input as rays of light fall on a prism (body-common sense) filled with everchanging fluid (background knowledge and information) which emits three kinds of rays - Intuition (distant ideas -brain, heart and gut- gut has as much nerve cells as brain), Telepathy (distant message-ears) and Clairvoyance (distant imagery-eyes).Psychics stand on the right side of the prism towards the ESP.A computer can be the prism with the sensing organs and ESP output as peripherals. As the prism model shows ESP is an output and so a misnomer! - Simon Richard (Ajay Kumar) P.S.: ...hence, it is not an input as the word 'perception' sounds!
Schizophrenia is a psychiatric disorder that involves problems with perception of reality. Autism is a developmental disorder that involves problems with theory of mind and sensory difficulties. While both disorders involve inappropriate affect (expression of emotion) and problems integrating sensory input, the disorders are completely different.
Stimuli.
touch
No, zoning out isn't a stimm. Stimming refers to self-stimulation, usually as a form of focused sensory input to focus on in order to take focus away from other external sensory input. Stimming includes behaviour such as rocking, tapping, flapping, etc. - there is no sensory input when zoning out.
having or showing keenness of insight, understanding, or intuition