Midbrain in the Brain Stem
The right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, and the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body.
The part of the human brain which controls voluntary muscle movement (controlled muscle movement) is called the Cerebellum. This part of the brain also controls your balance.cerebellum
cerebellum
The Human Reflex Physiology Review Sheet states that "Conversely, other reflexes require the involvement of the brain, since many different inputs must be evaluated before the appropriate reflex is determined. Superficial cord reflexes and pupillary responses to light are in this category" (p. 342).
There is a part of the brain called the Medulla Oblongata which is responsible for breathing and vision. This is also known as the little brain. It is located at the very very back. It is a ver small part of the brain.
cerebellum
reflexes
spinal cord
A reflex arc is a neutral pathway in the central nervous system. It controls reflex action. The sensory neurons do not directly pass into brain but go through spinal chord. Spinal chord can independently control many reflexes.
The medulla oblongata is a part of the brain stem involved in these reflexes. And no your eyes will not pop out if you sneeze with them open. Closing the eyes is part of the reflex and you have no control over reflexes.
The brainstem, specifically the superior olivary complex, is responsible for processing auditory reflexes such as the startle reflex and sound localization.
The brain stem is the part that controls breathing, it is the stem that allows the respiratory system to work and help you breathe
brain stem
The part of the brain called the Cnifiliatispin controls all testing of heat conditions.
Reflex responses are controlled in your spinal chord, not in your brain (;- your welcome
brain controls perception,reflexes,emotionsbehavioral sequences,etc. spinal cord helps in transmission of neural inputs between periphery and brain
To the extent that there can be said to be such a thing as a "part of the brain that controls hope", it's probably the prefrontal cortex.