The sense of taste is detected in the Parietal Lobe, which is just behind the Frontal Lobe.
The gustatory (taste) sense is primarily processed in the parietal lobe of the brain. This lobe is responsible for integrating sensory information related to taste, touch, and temperature.
Gustatory
Impulses from the skin are received in the parietal lobe of the brain. The parietal lobe is responsible for processing sensory information such as touch, temperature, and pain.
The cerebral cortex is responsible for interpreting impulses from the senses. Different areas of the cortex are specialized for processing information from different sensory modalities, such as vision, hearing, touch, taste, and smell.
Nerve impulses travel up through nerves, into the spinal cord and into one of the different lobes of the brain depending on where the impulse comes from. For example, if the impulse comes from your ear, the impulse would travel to the temporal lobe.
to sense taste :-)
The gustatory (taste) sense is primarily processed in the parietal lobe of the brain. This lobe is responsible for integrating sensory information related to taste, touch, and temperature.
The frontal lobe controls the sense of smell
impulses travel down cranial nerve 2 to what lobe
Gustatory
Nerve impulses travel up through nerves, into the spinal cord and into one of the different lobes of the brain depending on where the impulse comes from. For example, if the impulse comes from your ear, the impulse would travel to the temporal lobe.
Impulses from the skin are received in the parietal lobe of the brain. The parietal lobe is responsible for processing sensory information such as touch, temperature, and pain.
The lobe that controls sight is the occipital lobe. The lobe that contorls hearing is the temporal lobe, the lobe that deals with pain, pressure, temperature, touch, and part of taste is the parietal lobe. The lobe that controls consciousness and primary body movements is the frontal lobe. The temporal lobe is said to control smell.
The cerebral cortex is responsible for interpreting impulses from the senses. Different areas of the cortex are specialized for processing information from different sensory modalities, such as vision, hearing, touch, taste, and smell.
The sense associated with the temporal lobe is hearing.
Nerve impulses travel up through nerves, into the spinal cord and into one of the different lobes of the brain depending on where the impulse comes from. For example, if the impulse comes from your ear, the impulse would travel to the temporal lobe.
The parietal lobe is responsible for receiving and interpreting impulses from sensory receptors in the tongue and muscles. It plays a role in processing sensations related to touch, temperature, and pain.