The Frontal Lobe.
The ocipital lobe controls vision and color recognition.
The Parietal Lobe control touch, movement, pain, orientation, recognition and more....
Perception
Sense of smell and sound, speech, vision and memory.
Parietal lobe
The temporal lobe is responsible for processing auditory information, language comprehension, memory formation, and emotional responses. It also plays a role in object recognition and facial perception.
Anterior Lobe
Facial Recognition - 1978 was released on: USA: 1978
OCCIPITAL
The lobe of the brain primarily responsible for recognizing faces is the temporal lobe, specifically an area known as the fusiform gyrus. This region is part of the ventral visual stream and plays a crucial role in facial recognition and processing. Damage to this area can result in prosopagnosia, a condition characterized by the inability to recognize familiar faces.
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.
Frontal lobe