Temporal lobes.
the auditory nerve pathways carry impulses to the auditory cortices in the ?
The auditory nerve carries auditory impulses to the brain.
where does the unterneuron carry impulses
They carry impulses to the cell body. Axons carry impulses away from the cell body.
The impulses from the ear are carried to the brain by the auditory nerve, also known as the eighth cranial nerve or vestibulocochlear nerve. This nerve is responsible for transmitting sound and balance information from the inner ear to the brainstem.
Impulses traveling to the thalamus are afferent. Afferent pathways carry sensory information from the peripheral nervous system to the central nervous system, including the thalamus, for processing. Efferent pathways, on the other hand, carry motor commands from the central nervous system to the peripheral nervous system for action.
Nerve impulses do not carry information, they only carry impulses. It is the brain and spinal cord that interpret that impulse into information.
The four tasks of the auditory system are the following: 1. To pick up stimulus energy from the world around us. 2. To change that energy into a pattern of neural impulses. 3. To carry those impulses to the proper location in the brain. 4. To process the information contained in the pattern of impulses so that the stimulus can be identified
Sensory neurones carry impulses to the CNS, motor neurones carry impulses to muscles.
No, axons carry impulses away from the nerve cell body.
Electrical impulses.
A bundle of neurons is called a nerve. The neuron bundle, nerve, has afferent and efferent pathways, that means that it is like highways that are parallel to each other yet carry impulses, or traffic, in both directions.