The 5 sensations are:
- Skinny
- Skin-like
- Skinsensation
- Sensaskin
- Ya mum
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Stimuli can be detected by the five main senses: sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch. These senses allow organisms to perceive and respond to their environment. Additionally, some organisms have specialized sensory adaptations, such as electroreception in some fish or echolocation in bats.
Sensory receptors enable you to respond to stimuli in the environment of an organism. Some sensory receptors respond to taste and smell while others respond to physical stimuli.
Auditory stimuli are sounds that are detected by the auditory system, including the ears and the brain. These stimuli can range from simple tones to complex sounds like music or speech, and can affect emotions and behaviors.
Certain sensory receptors, such as nociceptors, can respond to multiple types of stimuli, including mechanical, thermal, and chemical signals. These receptors are responsible for detecting pain and can be activated by various harmful stimuli. Similarly, some mechanoreceptors can respond to both pressure and vibration. This versatility allows the nervous system to integrate and interpret complex sensory information from the environment.
They are specialized cells that respond to stimuli AND energize nerve cells that send data to your brain. As to what kinds there are: they include heat and cold (that's two seperate types) touch and pressure, piloreceptors (motion of the hairs on your skin).
Adaptation in sensory stimulation is important as it allows our sensory systems to function optimally. It helps filter out irrelevant information and focus on important stimuli. Adaptation also prevents sensory overload and allows us to detect changes in our environment more effectively.
Sensory organelles are specialized structures within cells that detect and respond to external stimuli. In organisms, these may include sensory receptors such as photoreceptors in the eyes, mechanoreceptors in the skin, and chemoreceptors in the nose and tongue. They play a crucial role in translating environmental signals into neural impulses, enabling organisms to perceive and interact with their surroundings. In some unicellular organisms, sensory organelles like eyespots help detect light, aiding in navigation.
Sensory stimuli such as sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell can affect our perception and behavior. For example, bright lights can make us feel alert, loud noises can make us feel anxious, and pleasant smells can make us feel relaxed. These stimuli can influence how we interpret and react to our surroundings.
The short answer is through the use of mechanoreceptors for non painful stimuli. There are four major types most stated (although others do exist) which are all specialised for particular somatosensory stimuli. For example, the Paccinian corpuscle transducts vibrations especially well, Merkel's disks transduct fine touch (e.g. for braille), Meissner's corpuscles transduct light touch and Ruffini's endings transduct deep pressure. In addition to these mechanoreceptors, there are also a number of 'nociceptors' or pain receptors which can transduct 'pain', or extremes of temperature, pressure and chemical stimuli.
an abnormal state of lack of response to sensory stimuli, resulting from injury, shock or some other bodily dispoder
the television has a switch that makes possible for it to light on an off, the remote control has a malty sensor that allow sensory waves to be detected in an immediate effect when pressing some of the buttons on the remote control, co ordination is carried by eclectic waves that allow stimuli as electrons pass through conductors allowing a electric flow of current.
Nerves are bundles of axons and their sheaths of connective tissue that extend from the CNS to peripheral structures,Nerves are responsible for stimuli communication and responceThe Central nervous system CNSBrainSpinal CordThe Prephrial nervous system PNSCranial nerves, which arise from the brain Sensory/ afferent transmits STIMULI from the sensory organs to the CNSMotor/ efferent-transmits action potentials from the CNS to effector organs when a Stimuli is recieved causing some sort of reaction.Spinal nerves, which arise from the spinal cordIf the sensory Stimuli was an itch on the tip of your nose the motor action potential generated would send your hand to your nose to scratch the itch.