Seeing (the eyes)
Smelling (the nose)
are two examples.
sight, hearing, smell, taste
Yes.
Try Anatomy and Physiology, although these are special senses, there is no category for them.
Sight-Eyes, Sound-Ears, Smell-Nose, Taste-Tongue, Touch-Skin
Your friend is wrong. The senses all depend on each other. Sensory adaptation.
Sensory receptors help sense something wrong with your body and this allows it to send the message to your brain. This will help you regain homeostasis.
Sensory Details
Adaptation of sensory receptors refers to the way in which our senses changed under different circumstances and stimuli.
A sensory system includes the sensory receptors, neural pathways, and the parts of the brain which are involved in sensory perception. The senses act as the transducers from the physical world to the mind where the information gathered by the senses is interpreted.
Touch, temperature and pain.
Try Anatomy and Physiology, although these are special senses, there is no category for them.
Sensory receptors are defined as dendrites of sensory neurons specialized for receiving specific kinds of stimuli without which we would not live long. The four general sense receptors are pain receptors, temperature receptors, touch receptors, and taste and smell receptors.
Senses are the physiological methods of perception. The senses and their operation, classification, and theory are overlapping topics studied by a variety of fields, most notably neuroscience, cognitive psychology (or cognitive science), and philosophy of perception.
Eyes, Ears, Noses, Tongues and Skin - for visual, auditory, olfactory, taste and tactile senses.
A sensory system includes the sensory receptors, neural pathways, and the parts of the brain which are involved in sensory perception. The senses act as the transducers from the physical world to the mind where the information gathered by the senses is interpreted.
You can consider it as general.
All your senses require receptors in order to work.
a sensory garden is a garden where you use all 5 senses
The term that relates to perception by one or more of the senses is "sensory." It refers to anything related to the senses, such as touch, taste, or smell.