Your internal organs have several kinds of sensory receptors. These receptors respond to touch, pressure, pain, and temperature by picking up the changes and transmitting impulses to the brain or spinal cord.it is important so you know when something is going on in your body
Effectors is the term that specifically refers to the structures that provide information about conditions in the internal environment.
Tonic receptors have little to no adaptation while phasic receptors adapt fast!
they are called receptors.
these have one or more receptors that detect change in either the external or internal environment, information that is detected is transmitted as an electrical impulse to the CNS by the affector neuron.
Auditory receptors are located in internal ears. The vestibulocochlear nerve carries the signal from internal ear to brain.
They are receptors.
sensory receptors
Skin and Internal tissues. Not in the nervous tissue of the brain, which lack of pain receptors.
Internal receptors, or intereceptors measure the amount of carbon dioxide in the blood, and that information is relayed and processes by the medulla oblongatta, which is the respiratory center in the brain stem.
Your internal organs have several kinds of sensory receptors. These receptors respond to touch, pressure, pain, and temperature by picking up the changes and transmitting impulses to the brain or spinal cord.it is important so you know when something is going on in your body
The semicircular canals, the vestibule, and the cochlea, which are subdivisions of the bony labyrinth. Semicircular canals and the vestibule contain receptors for equilibrium and the cochlea contains receptors for hearing.
The medulla in the brain is where the cardiac centre is. From here it receives signals from the chemoreceptors, these receptors detect chemical. They detect the amount of carbon dioxide in the blood.
Effectors is the term that specifically refers to the structures that provide information about conditions in the internal environment.
somatic receptors and special receptors
Tonic receptors have little to no adaptation while phasic receptors adapt fast!
Olfactory receptors