Nervous tissue or Nerve Tissue
Nervous tissue is responsible for detecting sensory information, initiating nerve impulses, and transmitting signals throughout the body to maintain homeostasis. It includes neurons and supporting cells that work together to coordinate various bodily functions.
The structure that transmits impulses from a receptor organ to an interneuron is the sensory neuron. When a receptor organ detects a stimulus, it generates an electrical signal that travels along the sensory neuron's axon. This signal then reaches the synapse with the interneuron, facilitating the transmission of the impulse to the central nervous system for processing.
neurons
The lateral line of a fish detects vibrations in the water and transmits them to the brain. The external ear in humans detects vibrations in air, water, and solids and transmits them to the brain.
the muscle spindle detects excessive stretch within the muscle , it response and makes the muscle contract
The olfactory nerve carries impulses from odor-detecting cells to the brain.
A seismometre detects seismic impulses in other words it basically measures earthquakes
The stimulus is detected by temperature or pain receptors in the skin. These generate impulses in sensory neurons. The impulses enter the CNS ( Central nervous system ) through a part of the spinal nerve called the Dorsal root.
Detects changes in blood pressure.
Detects changes in blood pressure.
Sense Organs
The nervous system.