The Parietal Lobe
The central nervous system, including the brain, controls speech, touch, sight, hearing, and smell through various specialized regions and pathways. Different areas of the brain are responsible for processing and interpreting information related to each of these sensory functions.
your brain controls your ears and eyes so BRAIN
cerebrum
Auditory seizures affect the part of the brain that controls hearing and cause the patient to imagine voices, music, and other sounds.
cerebrum
The optic nerve is associated with sight, transmitting visual information from the eye to the brain. The vestibulocochlear nerve is associated with hearing and balance, transmitting auditory and vestibular information from the inner ear to the brain.
Different parts of the brain are responsible for various sensory and speech functions. The Broca's area, located in the frontal lobe, is primarily involved in speech production. The parietal lobe processes touch sensations, while the occipital lobe is responsible for vision. Hearing is managed by the temporal lobe, and the sense of smell is processed by the olfactory bulb, which is located at the base of the frontal lobe.
The part of the body where you would find grey matter is in the brain. Grey matter is responsible for muscle control and sensory perception such as sight, hearing and speech.
The brain is the place where signals from the sense organs (eyes/ ears) are converted into what we think of as sight and sound.
The five senses that supply the brain with information are: sight (vision), hearing (audition), touch (tactile), taste (gustation), and smell (olfaction). Each sense provides the brain with specific information about the environment and helps us perceive and interact with the world around us.
yes it can. because of the spinal fluid going to the brain and if you lose to much it can affect your brain severely and you can damage not only your hearing but also your eye sight
These senses are found in the cerebrum but in special locations. Touch and pressure is found along the central sulcus of the parietal lobes, taste in the frontal lobe, smell in the temporal lobes, hearing also in the temporal lobes and vision in the occipital lobe.