no, james willman is a batty boy.
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Examples of sending messages from your nerves to the brain include feeling pain when you touch something hot, sensing pressure when sitting down, and perceiving a tickle when someone touches you lightly. These are all signals that travel through your nerves to your brain to communicate information about your surroundings.
Your brain tells the muscle to move by sending electric impulses through your nerves to your muscles.
Brain sends signal through spinal cord to nerves. Nerves contract which muscle to move and sends a message back to the brain. BOOM! Movement.
Yes, there are nerves in your hand. Nerves are responsible for sending signals to and from the brain, allowing you to feel sensations and move your fingers and hand.
neurotransmitters
No, the part of the body that controls your body is the brain. It works by sending messages via the nerves and going to the part of the body. For example, if you wanted to move your leg, your brain will send a message to your nerves via the spinal cord.
The stimuli will be picked up by the sensory neurons then nerve impulses travel to your spinal cord. Those nerve impulses return to motor neurons that will react (like you pull your hand away, or you yell) as you react the nerve impulses travel to your brain.
It sends the message to your brain of what your seeing
By sending and receiving messages through the nervus system.Your brain controls your body using nerves and communicates somehow with your muscles.C.Burgess
Depending on where the "message" originates, it would generally be the periphrial nervous system carrying the message to the central nervous system, which is then processed by the appropriate neurons in the brain. The class of these nerves are the "efferent" nerves.
afferent