The cerebellum is responsible for keeping track of your body position and coordinating movements. It receives input from sensory systems in the body to help maintain balance and posture.
The brain keeps the blood flow (a.k.a the heart) pumping, and that not to mention the other organs that require the brain to keep them go'in.
The structure responsible for sending impulses to the brain to determine body motion and position is the vestibular system located in the inner ear. This system includes the semicircular canals and otolith organs, which detect changes in head position and movement, and send this information to the brain to maintain balance and coordination.
The vestibular system in the inner ear, specifically the semicircular canals and otolith organs, transmit information related to balance and spatial orientation to the brain. This system detects head position and movement, helping to maintain equilibrium by sending signals to the brain about body position in relation to gravity.
Proprioception is the sense that allows you to perceive the position, movement, and actions of your body parts. It helps you maintain control, balance, and coordination during movement by providing feedback to the brain about the body's position.
Kinesthetic feedback is the information the brain receives from the muscles, tendons, and joints about the body's position, movement, and tension. This feedback helps the brain understand where the body is in space and how it is moving without having to rely solely on visual input.
The vestibular apparatus in the middle ear.
The brain of mammals keeps track of the temperature of the skin and blood to maintain a stable internal body temperature, which is crucial for the body to function properly.
The cerebellum is the part of the brain that plays a key role in monitoring the body's position, coordinating movements, and maintaining balance. It receives sensory information from the inner ear, eyes, and muscles to help regulate posture and movement.
In your skull, brain, body.
It's referred to as the sensory strip, it runs up/down in the temporal area.
Your brain is what sends signals to your body telling it what to do. Your brain is always active, even when your sleeping
The brain keeps the blood flow (a.k.a the heart) pumping, and that not to mention the other organs that require the brain to keep them go'in.
Well the brain keeps on working at night.The things that we listen/see/talk about keeps on going in your mind. That is why we get dreams related to us!Its all about our thoughts.Our human body is kind of a machine that keeps on working and reacts to it and in which BRAIN is the most important part!
what water does for your body?It keeps us hydrated and keeps you moving and helps the brain and keeps your blood stream flowing and keeps you healthy and strong and it keeps your body alive and your musclse healthy and keeps you from a heat stroak and all the other diseases
semicircular canals.
Your pores and sweat glands keep your body at the right temperature, that why when you get the flew you sweat allot and feel like there's heat coming off of your body.The body temperature control itself in a few ways. Some of the ways are skin, brain and cells.
It keeps/supports your body up and protects your inner organs(your heart, lunges, brain, mussles, etc...)