The frontal lobe controls the sense of smell
Parietal lobe.....
The cerebellum, or the forebrain, controls taste buds. Sensory neurons from the tongue send electrical impulses to the brain to determine a substance's taste. the major region is the "primary gustatory region" present just behind the temporal lobe (say, if temporal lobe is slightly lifted at the lateral sulcus)
The information travels to the temporal lobe of the brain.
For smell, the olfactory bulb (a brain structure directly above the nasal cavity and below the frontal lobe) interprets smell. The olfactory nerve endings are in the upper nasal cavity and detect smells. For taste, lower primary somatic sensory cortex interpreters the sense of taste. There are 5 different taste buds on the tongue that sense taste.
It's the occipital lobe and is responsible for sight.
This is pretty generalized but the frontal lobe is responsible for movement as well as personality, the parietal lobes are responsible for somatic (bodily) sensations, the temporal lobe functions in hearing and the occipital lobe functions in vision.
Impulses for the sense of taste travel to the parietal lobe of the brain. The parietal lobe is responsible for processing sensory information and integrating it with other sensory inputs. It helps us perceive and interpret the taste sensations we experience.
Frontal lobe.
The occipital lobe and the posteroinferior
That would primarily be the occipital lobe.
The Occipital Lobe and the Visual Cortex.
The lobe that controls sight is the occipital lobe. The lobe that contorls hearing is the temporal lobe, the lobe that deals with pain, pressure, temperature, touch, and part of taste is the parietal lobe. The lobe that controls consciousness and primary body movements is the frontal lobe. The temporal lobe is said to control smell.
which lobe of the brain is responsible for seeing
The cerebellum, or the forebrain, controls taste buds. Sensory neurons from the tongue send electrical impulses to the brain to determine a substance's taste. the major region is the "primary gustatory region" present just behind the temporal lobe (say, if temporal lobe is slightly lifted at the lateral sulcus)
The brain area that seems to be primarily responsible for the deficits seen in Gerstmann syndrome appears to be the parietal lobe, which is located behind the frontal lobe.
The hypothalamus is responsible for regulating body temperature and the sensation of warmth. It signals the body to dilate blood vessels near the skin's surface, allowing more blood flow and creating a feeling of warmth.
In the insula of the cerebrum area of the brain
The hippocampus and prefrontal cortex are key brain regions for learning and memory. The hippocampus helps with forming new memories, while the prefrontal cortex plays a role in decision-making, attention, and problem-solving, all of which are important for learning.