All of our senses except for our sense of smell. They are controlled by a separate station, the olfactory bulb, which explains why certains smells seem to do such a good job at bringing back certain memories.
Thalamus
Thalamotomy, surgery to the thalamus, was recommended in the past to control tremor.
no the cerebrum controls blood pressure.!.!
I believe it is the thalamus.
The hypothalamus is in control of homeostasis and the process of negative feedback (for example: blood solute level and body temperature). This is in contrast to the thalamus which is a sort of relay organ of the brain designed to transmit the sensory electrical pulse onto the more specialised organ (e.g. retina (eye) --> optic nerve --> thalamus --> primary visual cortex --> visual association cortex). It is slightly large and positioned above of the hypothalamus.
Answer this question… Most nerve impulses from our senses are routed through the? thalamus. apex
Most nerve impulses from our senses are routed through the: Thalamus-
Thalamus
thalamus
the thalamus
thalamus
The Thalamus
Its smell Information goes to olfactory cortex of the frontal lobe without going through the thalamus. Its the only major sense that does not go through the thalamus
Thalamotomy, surgery to the thalamus, was recommended in the past to control tremor.
no the cerebrum controls blood pressure.!.!
the thalamus
the thalamus