The thalamus, occipital lobe, parietal lobe, and temporal lobe all play parts in visual perception.
Most of the processing of visual information occurs in the occipital lobes. If you want to find out if you are left occipital lobe oriented or right occipital lobe orientated, you can try this simple experiment. With both eyes open, look at a small spot on a wall or ceiling across the room from you. Then use one hand and touch the thumb and index fingers together and hold it about arm's length away in front of you and then place the circle you made with your fingers over the spot and alternate closing one eye at a time. You will notice that you can only see the spot with one eye open. It will be the left or the right eye. This shows your dominant vision tendency and whether you prefer to use your left or right eye more.
The occipital lobe is the part of brain associated with sight.
it means u can get a tumor
Fore Brain
The part of the brain that is involved in sensory adaptation is the cerebral cortex. This area of the brain adapts the body's senses into signals so that hey can be understood by the brain. Touch, taste, smell, and sight sense signals are the signals that are converted.
The bit at the back
The brain stem.
The visible spectrum
The Parietal Lobe
The cerebrum the largest part of the brain
It depends on which part of the brain was injured - not all people lose their sense of smell. If the part of the brain that controls that sense is injured, then you will lose the ability because the brain cells are damaged and don't work to report smells like they used to.
neurons
The Occipital Lobe and the Visual Cortex.