The glossopharyngeal nerve and the vagus nerve primarily send information to the medulla oblongata, which is part of the brainstem. This area is involved in autonomic functions and processes sensory information related to taste, cardiovascular regulation, and respiratory control. Additionally, the vagus nerve has extensive connections throughout the brain, influencing various regions, including the limbic system and the hypothalamus.
Sight: Sight is processed by the visual cortex.Smell: Smell is a function of the olfactory system.Touch: Touch mostly occurs in the parietal lobe in the cerebral cortex.Taste: Taste ins understood by the brain through 3 different never bundles; the facial nerve, the glossopharyngeal nerve, and the vagus nerve.Hearing: Hearing is primarily a function of the temporal lobe.
temporal lobe
The trigeminal nerve sends sensory information to the parietal lobe of the brain for processing. This information includes sensations from the face, such as touch, pain, and temperature.
impulses travel down cranial nerve 2 to what lobe
The eyes gather the information sending it to the Optical Nerve and after that it is transmitted to the brain, the brain separates it and sends it to its different parts that are the Frontal Lobe, Parental Lobe, Temporal Lobe and Occipital Lobe. After that every lobe will be in charge of transmitting the information according to the fuction of each lobe
The Olfactory bulb via the olfactory nerves in the nose.
Primary somasthetic afferent neurons are found taste buds in the anterior 2/3rds of the tongue. Those fibers are carried towards the midbrain by the Chorda Tympani nerve (those are joint fibers from the lingual branch of the mandibular division of the Trigeminal nerve), which enters the tympanic cavity via the iter chorda posticus and exits thru the iter chorda anticus or the petrotympanic fissure. The nerve synapses with in the geniculate gangion of the VII cranial nerve. The secondary sensory neurons now travel through to the midbrain where they synaps with Nucleus tractus Solitarious. The tertiary fibers then go to parietal operculum of the parietal lobe (brodman area #43) the ultimate level of concious interperation of gustatory (taste) impressions.
The layer responsible for sending information along the optic nerve to the occipital lobe is the ganglion cell layer in the retina. Ganglion cells receive visual information from bipolar cells and amacrine cells before transmitting it via their axons through the optic nerve to the brain for further processing in the occipital lobe.
optic nerve (at the back of the eye) which then crosses at the optic chiasm. From this point, the optic tracts travel to the lateral geniculate nucleus, and then on to the visual cortex in the occipital lobe.
temporal
Gustatory
frontal lobe