somatosensory
(adjective)
of or pertaining to the perception of sensory stimuli produced by the skin or internal organs
Examples of somatosensory in the following topics:
-
Integration of Signals from Mechanoreceptors
- The many types of somatosensory receptors work together to ensure our ability to process the complexity of stimuli that are transmitted.
- Both primary somatosensory cortex and secondary cortical areas are responsible for processing the complex picture of stimuli transmitted from the interplay of mechanoreceptors.
- In the somatosensory system, receptive fields are regions of the skin or of internal organs.
-
Somatosensory Receptors
-
The Vestibular System
- There are also projections to the temporal cortex, which account for feelings of dizziness; projections to autonomic nervous system areas in the brainstem, which account for motion sickness; and projections to the primary somatosensory cortex, which monitors subjective measurements of the external world and self-movement.
- People with lesions in the vestibular area of the somatosensory cortex see vertical objects in the world as being tilted.
-
Thermoreception
- The thermoreceptor pathway in the brain runs from the spinal cord through the thalamus to the primary somatosensory cortex.
-
Brain: Cerebral Cortex and Brain Lobes
- The parietal lobe contains a somatosensory map of the body similar to the motor cortex.
-
Transduction and Perception
- The brain has dedicated areas to the processing of stimuli, including: (a) thalamus and (b) the auditory, visual and somatosensory processing regions.