All the brain lobes except the olfactory cortex.
The thalamus
Thalamus
Thalamus
Wernicke's area
The thalamus of the brain is often known as the relay system of the brain. It is located in the forebrain superior to the midbrain. Information from the body (except that of the olfactory nerve-sense of smell) is sent first to the thalamus, which relays that information to the correct location in the cerebral cortex of the brain. It is also involved with the basal ganglion, which coordinates movements.
cerebellum
thalamus
The thalamus
the thalamus
Relay and processing centers for sensory information.
nerves.. NERVES RELAY ALL MESSAGES TO THE BRAIN WHICH THEN THE BRAIN SENDS INFORMATION BACK THROUGH THE NERVES TO THE WHOLE BODY
Thalamus
relay centre
The thalamus encloses the shallow third ventricle of the brain, and is the relay station for sensory impulses passing upwards to the sensory cortex.
Thalamus
The Thalamus receives the information. It is then relayed to the post-central gyrus of the cerebrum on which you can map the human body. This is called the sensory humunculus (or little human).
the thalamus