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hypothalmus
The cerebellum controls balance as well as posture, movement and muscle coordination.
No, the medulla does that. The cerebellum controls our motor skills.
tentorium cerebelli separates your cerebellum from your cerebrum.
Proprioception
Interoceptors or visceroceptors
Interoceptors or visceroceptors
Self-consciously is an adverb and self-conscious is the adjective, it is describing someone who is excessively aware of being observed by others and always conscious (thinking about and aware of) how they look or how they are perceived to others.
Proprioception is how you perceive your limb position in space without visual confirmation. A proprioception deficit is when you can't tell the location of your limb in space without looking at it.
The balance organs are nonexistent. Balance is produced by a complicated interplay of different areas of the brain, including the cerebellum (subconscious proprioception and fine motor control), cerebrum (conscious proprioception) and the vestibular system, which is housed in the inner ear within the temporal bone, whose neural input feeds into the brainstem via cranial nerve VIII (the Vestibulocochlear or Auditory nerve).
The cerebellum, which is situated at the rear of the mind, is principally answerable for controlling actual coordination and equilibrium. It assumes a pivotal part in organizing willful developments, keeping up with act, and guaranteeing smooth, exact developments. The cerebellum gets data from different tangible frameworks, like the inward ear (for balance) and the muscles and joints (for proprioception), and it incorporates and processes this data to adjust engine orders from the cerebrum's engine cortex. This coordination considers smooth and composed developments of the body.
The cerebellum functions as a regulator of timing of movements. It integrates sensory perception and motor output. Many neural pathways link the cerebellum with the motor cortex - which sends information to the muscles causing them to move - and the spinocerebellar tract - which provides feed-back on the position of the body in space (proprioception). The cerebellum integrates these pathways, using the constant feed-back on body position to fine-tune motor movements. Studies of motor learning in the vestibulo-ocular reflex and eyeblink conditioning demonstrate that the timing and amplitude of learnt movements are encoded by the cerebellum.
Proprioception
r cerebellum
The sheep cerebellum is much smaller than the human cerebellum.
hypothalmus
no, the cerebellum is the brain.