There are many parts of the brain that are involved: bilateral inferior temporal cortex,
right insula, right inferior frontal cortex, left anterior cingulate cortex, right occipital gyrus, right hypothalamus and the left caudate (the striatum).
To sum it up, the temporal (visual memories and emotion), frontal (reward and motivation), occipital (vision) regions and the hypothalamus (hormone release) are the parts of the brain where phallic messages are sent.
Messages from the femoral nerve are sent to the brain through a series of electrical impulses. These impulses travel along the nerve fibers of the femoral nerve until they reach the spinal cord, where they are then transmitted up to the brain via the spinal cord's sensory pathways. Once in the brain, the messages are interpreted and processed to produce a response or sensation.
The nervous system starts in the brain, which is the main control center of the body. From the brain, messages are sent through the spinal cord, which acts as a pathway to relay information between the brain and the rest of the body.
The brain interprets the messages sent by different nerves through a complex network of neurons that communicate through electrical and chemical signals. Different regions of the brain are responsible for processing specific types of sensory information and integrating it to create a coherent perception of the world.
In most cases signals are sent to the brain through the nervous system. Individual signals are transfer from neuron to neuron in the form of chemical and electrical energy that eventually reach the brain.
The brain does not receive 100 million messages per second. While the brain can process large amounts of information quickly, a specific number like 100 million messages per second is an oversimplification and not an accurate representation of how the brain functions.
electrical impulses
All the brain's messages are sent through the nervous system.
the brain stem also sorts though the millions of messages that the brain and the rest of the body sent back and forth.
true
Messages from the femoral nerve are sent to the brain through a series of electrical impulses. These impulses travel along the nerve fibers of the femoral nerve until they reach the spinal cord, where they are then transmitted up to the brain via the spinal cord's sensory pathways. Once in the brain, the messages are interpreted and processed to produce a response or sensation.
Brain is likened to a telephone switchboard because brain is connected to series of network that accept messages from various stimuli, after accepting the stimuli, the brain will send reflexes in accordance with the messages sent.
The spinal cord is attached to the brain. It is how messages from the brain are sent to various locations along the nervous system.
The neurons in the body take the messages and they go to the brain and back to the body. if we didn't have neurons we woudn't know what we felt or other 5 senses, about something..
Ahhh, Hmm, The Brain
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if i am correct the brain sends messages to the rest of the body by sending pulses down your spine where it connects to the brain. most of the major parts in your body are connected somehow to the spine. the messages break off from the spine and get sent to the rest of the body.
Both the nervous system and the endocrine system send messages to the brain