OUCH!
stimulus= touching something hot response= moving hand away :)
Hitting the skin with a needle or pin is an example of stimulus and the sudden removing of the hand or jumping away is the response. When we hold a hot plate of pie Mommy cooked with love, we all of a sudden fling our hand away from it. Holding the plate here is a stimulus and the removal of hand is the response. && Bang! You jump because the sound startled you. You jumping is the response to the stimulus. Or touching a hot plate your response is you pull your finger back. a gazelle seeing a lion so it runs its raining so you get an umbrella its snowing so you get a jacket a dog is hot so it goes under the shade
when we touch a hot object we immediately (even without thinking) withdraw our hand. touching the hot object is the stimulus and withdrawing our hand is the response
the stimulus is the hot pan causing a signal to be sent to the brain which causes the hand to be pulled away which is the response
Example: Touching something hot - stimulus. Pull hand away- response.
A stimulus can be internal or external. An example of an internal stimulus is feeling hunger or feeling the need to urinate. An example of an external stimulus is hearing a loud noise or touching a hot object.A response is what you to voluntarily or involuntarily in response. Your response to hunger is to eat. Your response to touching a hot object is to jerk you hand away reflexively.
Because she got burnt?
The knee jerk and touching something hot or sharp and moving your hand away quickly.
For e.g. perception is a complex process of response to stimuli..when cat sees(stimulus) that we are moving towards her she gets scared and runs away(response). Or when rain starts(stimulus) we suddenly wants to hide ourselves from umbrella or by other means(response).
Because then they would be touching each other.
It can cause contamination because the microbes that are found on your hand interact with the gel and start to form growth colonies.
Reflexes are involuntary actions, whereby a stimulus - touching a boiling plate, for example - triggers an almost instantaneous response from our muscles. In this demonstrated case, the response would be to let go of the plate and retract your hand quickly. They are innate, so we are born with the intuition necessary to respond fast to a stimulus. The reflex action does not involve the brain. It bypasses the brain and uses just the sensory, relay and motor neurones to ensure that we come to as little harm as possible. Another reflex would be blinking when someone aims a punch at you. Because the response (blinking) does not need the brain's intervention, time is saved which could end up being the difference between losing, or saving, your sight.