somatosensation
(noun)
general senses which respond to stimuli like temperature, pain, pressure, and vibration
Examples of somatosensation in the following topics:
-
Reception
- Additionally, we possess general senses, also called somatosensation, which respond to stimuli like temperature, pain, pressure, and vibration.
- Vestibular sensation, which is an organism's sense of spatial orientation and balance, proprioception (position of bones, joints, and muscles), and the sense of limb position that is used to track kinesthesia (limb movement) are part of somatosensation.
-
Cutaneous Sensation
- Initiation of somatosensation begins with activation of a physical "receptor," such as a hand touching fabric the vibrations generated as a finger scans across a surface.
-
Somatosensation: Pressure, Temperature, and Pain
-
Brain: Cerebral Cortex and Brain Lobes
- Two of the parietal lobe's main functions are processing somatosensation (touch sensations such as pressure, pain, heat, cold) and processing proprioception (the sense of how parts of the body are oriented in space).
-
Overview of the Cerebrum
- Two of the parietal lobe's main functions are processing somatosensation (touch sensations such as pressure, pain, heat, cold) and proprioception (the sense of how parts of the body are oriented in space).
-
Overview of Sensation
- Touch or somatosensation (tactioception, tactition, or mechanoreception), is a perception resulting from activation of neural receptors in the skin including hair follicles, tongue, throat, and mucosa, etc.
-
Sensory Modalities
- Touch or somatosensation (tactioception, tactition, or mechanoreception), is a perception resulting from activation of neural receptors in the skin including hair follicles, tongue, throat, and mucosa, etc.