Optic Nerve = Vision
Oculomotor Nerve = Eye movement; pupil constriction
Trochlear Nerve = Eye movement
Trigeminal Nerve = Somatosensory information (touch, pain) from the face and head; muscles for chewing.
Abducens Nerve = Eye Movement
Vestibulocochlear Nerve = Hearing; balance
Vagus Nerve = Sensory, motor and autonomic functions of viscera (glands, digestion, heart rate)
Spinal Accessory Nerve = Controls muscles used in head movement.
Hypoglossal Nerve = Controls muscles of tongue
The vestibular (VIII)
The Olfactory nerve. CN1 Cranial Nerve I, or the first cranial nerve called the Olfactory nerve.
Smell impulses are carried by the cranial nerve called the olfactory nerve (cranial nerve I). It is responsible for transmitting information about odors from the nose to the brain.
Its the first cranial nerve called the olfactory.
The olfactory nerve which is also cranial nerve number 1 is responsible for the sense of olfaction.
The organ of smell is the nose - more specifically it is a patch of epithelium called the olfactory epithelium located in the roof of the nasal cavity. The cranial nerves associated with smell are the olfactory (I) nerves
The olfactory nerve, also known as the first cranial nerve, transports impulses for sense of smell to the brain. The olfactory nerve is capable of regeneration.
The olfactory nerves are cranial nerves( arise from the brain ). olfactory nerve is the first nerve among the all cranial nerves. olfactory nerves passes sense of smell through nerve impulses( chemical=neurotransmitters, and electrical signals ).
olfactory
It is the first of the twelve cranial nerve. The name of this nerve is olfactory. It carries the sensation of smell to the brain.
The only two cranial nerves that are completely sensory are the olfactory nerve (I) for smell and the optic nerve (II) for vision.
Damaging cranial nerve one, the olfactory nerve, can result in a loss of the sense of smell (anosmia). This can impact your ability to detect odors, which may affect your ability to taste food as well.