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All except sound
It is used in the thermometers as it detects the heat change.It points out the variation of temperature of human body.
The human nervous system allows us to experience pain. When our body detects potential harm or injury, specialized nerve receptors called nociceptors send signals to the brain, which interprets these signals as pain.
A seismometer.
The retina.
themorecptrs
Temperature - Skin Receptors.
It detects the stimulus
A photoreceptor detects light rays. It works somewhat like taste receptors do.
The skin regulates body temperature. (Sweating, shivering,...)
Short answer, no. Body temperature is controlled in the body's thermoregulatory center, the hypothalamus. This center detects changes in temperature delivered from temperature receptors along the CNS. Most responses involve muscles; also connected to the CNS, and so blood isnt involved
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.
ACH receptors can be defined as an integral membrane protein that responds to the binding of acetylcholine, a neuoyansmitter. Two example are nicotinic acetyl line receptors and muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. .
I recently studied this.. Of the top of my head, I think it is pressure and pain receptors!?
Temperature is hoe hot something is. This detects on what lives in it and what can't.
Hypothalamus
There are many different sensory receptors, but olfactory receptors in the nose, and cones and rods in the eyes are two specific types of sensory receptors. Olfactory detects the chemical presence and your brain identifies it as a smell. The rods and cones of the eye process light and color to form images that your brain processes as vision.