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In the insula of the cerebrum area of the brain
pain and other feelings of touch come from an area of the brain called the "madula oblumgata".if you didnt have one you wouldnt even know if you were on fire.
Insula
The white matter is the area of the brain where signals travel to other parts of the brain. It is located in the subcortical area.
Thallamus area
autonomic nervous gago system
In the insula of the cerebrum area of the brain
In the insula of the cerebrum area of the brain
The jewish part
The part of the brain that is involved in sensory adaptation is the cerebral cortex. This area of the brain adapts the body's senses into signals so that hey can be understood by the brain. Touch, taste, smell, and sight sense signals are the signals that are converted.
The information travels to the temporal lobe of the brain.
Parietal lobe
Both these regions of the brain are concerned with speech and language. Brocas is concerned with the actual mechanical production of peech. Damage to this area appears as an inability to produce correct sounds.Wernicke's area is concerned with the understanding of speech and language.Fairly simple tests are able to distinguish which area is damaged. Broca's area is often damaged in strokes.
pain and other feelings of touch come from an area of the brain called the "madula oblumgata".if you didnt have one you wouldnt even know if you were on fire.
Gustatory receptors are part of the sense of taste. They are in your mouth. Olfactory receptors are part of the sense of smell. They are in your nose.
Empirical encephalograph readings indicate that brain activity (electrical readings) corresponds to a thought. While not entirely concrete, it is the best indicator of an immeasurable activity. The brain, while an organic unit, sends and receives electrical impulses from throughout the body. Only from area to area are these patterns known as "thought" evident by means of the encephalograph. We also cannot "touch" sensory information like touch, cold, heat, itching, pain, etc., yet we know these exist. Where they exist relies on the network of neurons and chemical neurotransmitters that neurons use to "pass" the information between one neuron and the next, or between one area of the brain and another. As another example of the encoding of information collected and processed by neurons, one only has to think of a memory---such as the face of your mother. You can touch the face of your mom, but you cannot touch the memory of your mother's face.
the back right area of the brain