enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sensory nervous system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensory_nervous_system

    A sensory system consists of sensory neurons (including the sensory receptor cells), neural pathways, and parts of the brain involved in sensory perception and interoception. Commonly recognized sensory systems are those for vision , hearing , touch , taste , smell , balance and visceral sensation.

  3. Sensory neuron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensory_neuron

    A phasic receptor is a sensory receptor that adapts rapidly to a stimulus. The response of the cell diminishes very quickly and then stops. [ 32 ] It does not provide information on the duration of the stimulus; [ 30 ] instead some of them convey information on rapid changes in stimulus intensity and rate. [ 31 ]

  4. Stimulus modality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stimulus_modality

    Stimulus modality, also called sensory modality, is one aspect of a stimulus or what is perceived after a stimulus. For example, the temperature modality is registered after heat or cold stimulate a receptor. Some sensory modalities include: light, sound, temperature, taste, pressure, and smell.

  5. Sense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sense

    Sensory receptors in pharynx mucosa, similar to touch receptors in the skin, sense foreign objects such as mucus and food that may result in a gag reflex and corresponding gagging sensation. Stimulation of sensory receptors in the urinary bladder and rectum may result in perceptions of fullness.

  6. Somatosensory system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory_system

    The somatosensory cortex encodes incoming sensory information from receptors all over the body. Affective touch is a type of sensory information that elicits an emotional reaction and is usually social in nature, such as a physical human touch. This type of information is actually coded differently than other sensory information.

  7. Stimulus (physiology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stimulus_(physiology)

    Sensory receptors can receive stimuli from outside the body, as in touch receptors found in the skin or light receptors in the eye, as well as from inside the body, as in chemoreceptors and mechanoreceptors. When a stimulus is detected by a sensory receptor, it can elicit a reflex via stimulus transduction.

  8. Mechanoreceptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanoreceptor

    A mechanoreceptor, also called mechanoceptor, is a sensory receptor that responds to mechanical pressure or distortion. Mechanoreceptors are located on sensory neurons that convert mechanical pressure into electrical signals that, in animals, are sent to the central nervous system.

  9. Law of specific nerve energies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_specific_nerve_energies

    Here is Müller's statement of the law, from Handbuch der Physiologie des Menschen für Vorlesungen, 2nd Ed., translated by Edwin Clarke and Charles Donald O'Malley: . The same cause, such as electricity, can simultaneously affect all sensory organs, since they are all sensitive to it; and yet, every sensory nerve reacts to it differently; one nerve perceives it as light, another hears its ...