Well it is the visual proccing center . And your senses such as smell taste an your other senses
optical lobe of the cortex
No. That would be a function of the occipital lobes located at the back of the skull.
Frontal lobe, Parietal lobe, Occipital lobe, and Temporal lobe Frontal lobe- front of brain, last part to develop. Judgement, decision making and speaking are functioned here. Parietal lobe- Sensory input of touch and body position Occipital lobe- in charge of visual. if you get hit hard enough hear you can become blind. This also explains when you get hit you see spots Temporal lobe- in charge of hear (auditory )
Frontal lobe
anterior lobe
Frontal lobe Parietal Lobe Optical Lobe Temporal Lobe
optical lobe of the cortex
The eyes gather the information sending it to the Optical Nerve and after that it is transmitted to the brain, the brain separates it and sends it to its different parts that are the Frontal Lobe, Parental Lobe, Temporal Lobe and Occipital Lobe. After that every lobe will be in charge of transmitting the information according to the fuction of each lobe
The Optical lobe. (Or something like that) It sits at the back of your brain.
No. That would be a function of the occipital lobes located at the back of the skull.
Frontal lobe, Parietal lobe, Occipital lobe, and Temporal lobe Frontal lobe- front of brain, last part to develop. Judgement, decision making and speaking are functioned here. Parietal lobe- Sensory input of touch and body position Occipital lobe- in charge of visual. if you get hit hard enough hear you can become blind. This also explains when you get hit you see spots Temporal lobe- in charge of hear (auditory )
frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, and the temporal lobe
That would primarily be the occipital lobe.
Optical illusions are created by giving the visual cortex in the occipital lobe conflicting information. When the visual cortex tries to sort out the conflicting information received from the eyes, it must make a decision about which pattern or information to process and which pattern or information to disregard.
Receives the messages from the Olfactory Lobe and sends them to the main part of the brain
Frontal lobe
Vision reception is processed in the occipital lobe (at the back of the brain), with visuospatial processing occurring in the parietal lobe.