why dont yhu just say it dummie
The left brain tends to see and interpret the world in a logical and analytical manner. It focuses on language, math, and reasoning abilities, as well as processing information in a sequential and organized way.
Sound
Its the left side of the brain that is injured As the right side of your brain controls the left side of your body as the left does your right.
Perceptual constancies demonstrate the brain's ability to maintain stable perceptions despite changes in sensory inputs. This reveals the brain's capacity to interpret and process sensory information using past experiences to create a coherent perception of the world. It highlights the brain's sophisticated mechanisms for actively constructing our perception of reality.
There are several (a lot) of tiny hair like structures inside the ear will vibrate in response to certain sound frequencies. When a hair vibrates, it stimulates a particular cell which sends a signal to the neurons next to it, to the brain. The brain takes all of the inputs and can interpret that as sounds and frequencies. Louder sounds will cause it to vibrate more, so the brain can interpret that as well.
The left brain tends to see and interpret the world in a logical and analytical manner. It focuses on language, math, and reasoning abilities, as well as processing information in a sequential and organized way.
If you do not you will not live a life. How does the brain interpret color ...that brains can get fixed.
You have to see the brain like a ant
You have to see the brain like a ant
The temporal lobe of the brain is where interpret sound.
"pitch"
by the exact time
The brain can interpret stimuli when it receives signals from sensory organs through neural pathways. This allows the brain to process and make sense of the information, enabling us to perceive and respond to our environment. The interpretation of stimuli happens rapidly and continuously as the brain analyzes and integrates incoming information.
The eye doesn't interpret. The brain does.
Sound
Interpret s
The brain interprets loudness based on the intensity of sound waves that reach the ear. The ear converts sound waves into electrical signals, which are then transmitted to the brain. Different regions of the brain process these signals and interpret them as varying levels of loudness.