sensory neurons
The nervous tissue, specifically neurons, are responsible for sending messages from the brain to the body. Neurons transmit electrical impulses that allow for communication throughout the body, facilitating movement, sensation, and coordination.
Quite a few, depending on what sensation you're interested in, but the cribiform plate is actually a part of the brain (the olfactory lobe), the only part of the brain that connects to the outside world directly.
The Optic Nerve
The occipital lobe is the part of the brain that receives impulses for sight from the eyes. It is located at the back of the brain and is responsible for processing visual information.
The cochlea is responsible for converting sound vibrations into electrical signals that can be interpreted by the brain. It is a spiral-shaped, fluid-filled structure in the inner ear that contains thousands of hair cells that detect different frequencies of sound.
sensory neurons
Neuron
autonomic nervous system
The amygdala.
by nervous system Your body knows when to move because it sends electrical impulses to the brain
The optic nerve sends electrical signals from the rods and cones in the retina to the brain. These signals are then interpreted by the brain as visual information, allowing us to see.
semicircular canals.
The hernia
Sends reactions to the brain that have to do with feel and touch. The spinal cord is very important. Chemichal messengers send the impulses to the brain
Optic nerve is found in the eye which sends the nerve impulses from the eye to the brain. The auditory nerve is present in the ear and sends the nerve impulses from the ear to the brain. They both have the same functions though they're present in different places.
all of your organs are connected to your brain. for example when you touch something hot your brain sends impulses to the body part to move.
the brain sends electrical shocks through our nervous system that tells our body how to move, and when to do it.