Somatosensation is a mixed sensory category and includes all sensation received from the skin and mucous membranes, as well from as the limbs and joints. Somatosensation is also known as tactile sense, or more familiarly, as the sense of touch.
Nerve function in the hand
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Somatosensation
Bone and Nerve of Hand
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Bone and Nerve of Hand
3D visualization reconstructed from scanned human data of the nerves of the hand. Two distinct nerve groups are at work - those that distribute motor signals to dozens of muscles and those that supply the skin.
Image by TheVisualMD
Somatosensation
Somatosensation is a mixed sensory category and includes all sensation received from the skin and mucous membranes, as well from as the limbs and joints. Somatosensation is also known as tactile sense, or more familiarly, as the sense of touch. Somatosensation occurs all over the exterior of the body and at some interior locations as well. A variety of receptor types—embedded in the skin, mucous membranes, muscles, joints, internal organs, and cardiovascular system—play a role.
Recall that the epidermis is the outermost layer of skin in mammals. It is relatively thin, is composed of keratin-filled cells, and has no blood supply. The epidermis serves as a barrier to water and to invasion by pathogens. Below this, the much thicker dermis contains blood vessels, sweat glands, hair follicles, lymph vessels, and lipid-secreting sebaceous glands (Figure). Below the epidermis and dermis is the subcutaneous tissue, or hypodermis, the fatty layer that contains blood vessels, connective tissue, and the axons of sensory neurons. The hypodermis, which holds about 50 percent of the body’s fat, attaches the dermis to the bone and muscle, and supplies nerves and blood vessels to the dermis.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (11)
Human Finger Revealing Dermis and Epidermis
3D visualization of a cross section of the human finger. The finger is made up of many layers of tissue which help to protect the underlying arteries, veins, nerves, and bone. The outer layers, the epidermis and dermis, provide a functional gripping surface and contain the nerves that sense tactile information, temperature and pain. Beneath these layers, a thick layer of fat cushions and insulates the rigid skeletal system and provides a soft bed for veins and arteries that nourish the surrounding tissues.
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Muscle and Nerve of Human Eye
3D visualization of the nerves associated with the human eye. Several different nerve types serve the special functions of the structures associated with sight. The optic nerves are paired bundles of fibers that send visual signals from the retina to the brain. The oculomotor, trochlear and abducent nerves control voluntary movements of the eye muscles and eyelids in addition to controlling pupil dilation and lens focusing.
Image by TheVisualMD
Nerve function in the hand
Nerve function in the hand
Image by TheVisualMD
Peripheral somatosensation | Organ Systems | MCAT | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Somatosensation | Processing the Environment | MCAT | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Somatosensory tracts | Organ Systems | MCAT | Khan Academy
Physiology of Touch: Receptors and Pathways, Animation
Alila Medical Media/YouTube
2:02
2-Minute Neuroscience: Touch and the Dorsal Columns-Medial Lemniscus
Neuroscientifically Challenged/YouTube
1:55
2-Minute Neuroscience: Vestibular System
Neuroscientifically Challenged/YouTube
2:04
2-Minute Neuroscience: The Thalamus
Neuroscientifically Challenged/YouTube
Somatosensory Receptors
Human Finger Revealing Sensory Receptor
Image by TheVisualMD
Human Finger Revealing Sensory Receptor
Visualization of a cross section of a human finger revealing sensory receptors. The outer layers, the epidermis and dermis, provide a functional gripping surface and contain the nerves that sense tactile information, temperature and pain. Beneath these layers, a thick layer of fat cushions and insulates the rigid skeletal system and provides a soft bed for veins and arteries that nourish the surrounding tissues.
Image by TheVisualMD
Somatosensory Receptors
Sensory receptors are classified into five categories: mechanoreceptors, thermoreceptors, proprioceptors, pain receptors, and chemoreceptors. These categories are based on the nature of stimuli each receptor class transduces. What is commonly referred to as “touch” involves more than one kind of stimulus and more than one kind of receptor. Mechanoreceptors in the skin are described as encapsulated (that is, surrounded by a capsule) or unencapsulated (a group that includes free nerve endings). A free nerve ending, as its name implies, is an unencapsulated dendrite of a sensory neuron. Free nerve endings are the most common nerve endings in skin, and they extend into the middle of the epidermis. Free nerve endings are sensitive to painful stimuli, to hot and cold, and to light touch. They are slow to adjust to a stimulus and so are less sensitive to abrupt changes in stimulation.
There are three classes of mechanoreceptors: tactile, proprioceptors, and baroreceptors. Mechanoreceptors sense stimuli due to physical deformation of their plasma membranes. They contain mechanically gated ion channels whose gates open or close in response to pressure, touch, stretching, and sound.” There are four primary tactile mechanoreceptors in human skin: Merkel’s disks, Meissner’s corpuscles, Ruffini endings, and Pacinian corpuscle; two are located toward the surface of the skin and two are located deeper. A fifth type of mechanoreceptor, Krause end bulbs, are found only in specialized regions. Merkel’s disks (shown in Figure) are found in the upper layers of skin near the base of the epidermis, both in skin that has hair and on glabrous skin, that is, the hairless skin found on the palms and fingers, the soles of the feet, and the lips of humans and other primates. Merkel’s disks are densely distributed in the fingertips and lips. They are slow-adapting, encapsulated nerve endings, and they respond to light touch. Light touch, also known as discriminative touch, is a light pressure that allows the location of a stimulus to be pinpointed. The receptive fields of Merkel’s disks are small with well-defined borders. That makes them finely sensitive to edges and they come into use in tasks such as typing on a keyboard.
Meissner’s corpuscles, (shown in Figure) also known as tactile corpuscles, are found in the upper dermis, but they project into the epidermis. They, too, are found primarily in the glabrous skin on the fingertips and eyelids. They respond to fine touch and pressure, but they also respond to low-frequency vibration or flutter. They are rapidly adapting, fluid-filled, encapsulated neurons with small, well-defined borders and are responsive to fine details. Like Merkel’s disks, Meissner’s corpuscles are not as plentiful in the palms as they are in the fingertips.
Deeper in the epidermis, near the base, are Ruffini endings, which are also known as bulbous corpuscles. They are found in both glabrous and hairy skin. These are slow-adapting, encapsulated mechanoreceptors that detect skin stretch and deformations within joints, so they provide valuable feedback for gripping objects and controlling finger position and movement. Thus, they also contribute to proprioception and kinesthesia. Ruffini endings also detect warmth. Note that these warmth detectors are situated deeper in the skin than are the cold detectors. It is not surprising, then, that humans detect cold stimuli before they detect warm stimuli.
Pacinian corpuscles (seen in Figure) are located deep in the dermis of both glabrous and hairy skin and are structurally similar to Meissner’s corpuscles; they are found in the bone periosteum, joint capsules, pancreas and other viscera, breast, and genitals. They are rapidly adapting mechanoreceptors that sense deep transient (but not prolonged) pressure and high-frequency vibration. Pacinian receptors detect pressure and vibration by being compressed, stimulating their internal dendrites. There are fewer Pacinian corpuscles and Ruffini endings in skin than there are Merkel’s disks and Meissner’s corpuscles.
In proprioception, proprioceptive and kinesthetic signals travel through myelinated afferent neurons running from the spinal cord to the medulla. Neurons are not physically connected, but communicate via neurotransmitters secreted into synapses or “gaps” between communicating neurons. Once in the medulla, the neurons continue carrying the signals to the thalamus.
Muscle spindles are stretch receptors that detect the amount of stretch, or lengthening of muscles. Related to these are Golgi tendon organs, which are tension receptors that detect the force of muscle contraction. Proprioceptive and kinesthetic signals come from limbs. Unconscious proprioceptive signals run from the spinal cord to the cerebellum, the brain region that coordinates muscle contraction, rather than to the thalamus, like most other sensory information.
Barorecptors detect pressure changes in an organ. They are found in the walls of the carotid artery and the aorta where they monitor blood pressure, and in the lungs where they detect the degree of lung expansion. Stretch receptors are found at various sites in the digestive and urinary systems.
In addition to these two types of deeper receptors, there are also rapidly adapting hair receptors, which are found on nerve endings that wrap around the base of hair follicles. There are a few types of hair receptors that detect slow and rapid hair movement, and they differ in their sensitivity to movement. Some hair receptors also detect skin deflection, and certain rapidly adapting hair receptors allow detection of stimuli that have not yet touched the skin.
Integration of Signals from Mechanoreceptors
The configuration of the different types of receptors working in concert in human skin results in a very refined sense of touch. The nociceptive receptors—those that detect pain—are located near the surface. Small, finely calibrated mechanoreceptors—Merkel’s disks and Meissner’s corpuscles—are located in the upper layers and can precisely localize even gentle touch. The large mechanoreceptors—Pacinian corpuscles and Ruffini endings—are located in the lower layers and respond to deeper touch. (Consider that the deep pressure that reaches those deeper receptors would not need to be finely localized.) Both the upper and lower layers of the skin hold rapidly and slowly adapting receptors. Both primary somatosensory cortex and secondary cortical areas are responsible for processing the complex picture of stimuli transmitted from the interplay of mechanoreceptors.
Density of Mechanoreceptors
The distribution of touch receptors in human skin is not consistent over the body. In humans, touch receptors are less dense in skin covered with any type of hair, such as the arms, legs, torso, and face. Touch receptors are denser in glabrous skin (the type found on human fingertips and lips, for example), which is typically more sensitive and is thicker than hairy skin (4 to 5 mm versus 2 to 3 mm).
How is receptor density estimated in a human subject? The relative density of pressure receptors in different locations on the body can be demonstrated experimentally using a two-point discrimination test. In this demonstration, two sharp points, such as two thumbtacks, are brought into contact with the subject’s skin (though not hard enough to cause pain or break the skin). The subject reports if he or she feels one point or two points. If the two points are felt as one point, it can be inferred that the two points are both in the receptive field of a single sensory receptor. If two points are felt as two separate points, each is in the receptive field of two separate sensory receptors. The points could then be moved closer and re-tested until the subject reports feeling only one point, and the size of the receptive field of a single receptor could be estimated from that distance.
Thermoreception
In addition to Krause end bulbs that detect cold and Ruffini endings that detect warmth, there are different types of cold receptors on some free nerve endings: thermoreceptors, located in the dermis, skeletal muscles, liver, and hypothalamus, that are activated by different temperatures. Their pathways into the brain run from the spinal cord through the thalamus to the primary somatosensory cortex. Warmth and cold information from the face travels through one of the cranial nerves to the brain. You know from experience that a tolerably cold or hot stimulus can quickly progress to a much more intense stimulus that is no longer tolerable. Any stimulus that is too intense can be perceived as pain because temperature sensations are conducted along the same pathways that carry pain sensations
Pain
Pain is the name given to nociception, which is the neural processing of injurious stimuli in response to tissue damage. Pain is caused by true sources of injury, such as contact with a heat source that causes a thermal burn or contact with a corrosive chemical. But pain also can be caused by harmless stimuli that mimic the action of damaging stimuli, such as contact with capsaicins, the compounds that cause peppers to taste hot and which are used in self-defense pepper sprays and certain topical medications. Peppers taste “hot” because the protein receptors that bind capsaicin open the same calcium channels that are activated by warm receptors.
Nociception starts at the sensory receptors, but pain, inasmuch as it is the perception of nociception, does not start until it is communicated to the brain. There are several nociceptive pathways to and through the brain. Most axons carrying nociceptive information into the brain from the spinal cord project to the thalamus (as do other sensory neurons) and the neural signal undergoes final processing in the primary somatosensory cortex. Interestingly, one nociceptive pathway projects not to the thalamus but directly to the hypothalamus in the forebrain, which modulates the cardiovascular and neuroendocrine functions of the autonomic nervous system. Recall that threatening—or painful—stimuli stimulate the sympathetic branch of the visceral sensory system, readying a fight-or-flight response.
Summary
Somatosensation includes all sensation received from the skin and mucous membranes, as well as from the limbs and joints. Somatosensation occurs all over the exterior of the body and at some interior locations as well, and a variety of receptor types, embedded in the skin and mucous membranes, play a role.
There are several types of specialized sensory receptors. Rapidly adapting free nerve endings detect nociception, hot and cold, and light touch. Slowly adapting, encapsulated Merkel’s disks are found in fingertips and lips, and respond to light touch. Meissner’s corpuscles, found in glabrous skin, are rapidly adapting, encapsulated receptors that detect touch, low-frequency vibration, and flutter. Ruffini endings are slowly adapting, encapsulated receptors that detect skin stretch, joint activity, and warmth. Hair receptors are rapidly adapting nerve endings wrapped around the base of hair follicles that detect hair movement and skin deflection. Finally, Pacinian corpuscles are encapsulated, rapidly adapting receptors that detect transient pressure and high-frequency vibration.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (14)
Somatosensory Cortex
Motor and Sensory Regions of the Cerebral Cortex
Image by BruceBlaus
Brain Sensory Nerve Communicating with Ear
Visualization of sensory nerves in the brain that directly communicate with the interior of the ear.
Image by TheVisualMD
Krause's End Bulb
Medical visualization of a Krause's end bulb. Krause's end bulbs are encapsulated sensory nerve endings that are found in the superficial layers of the dermis. This rapidly adapting receptor is thought to be sensitive to light touch and cold.
Image by TheVisualMD
What Makes You Unique
Everything you think of as making up your essential "self," your intellect, emotions and feelings, desires, thoughts and perceptions, and dreams, all depend on a 3-pound mass of cells inside your skull: your brain. Your brain joins with your spine and billions of nerve cells, or neurons, to form your nervous system. The nervous system is both an internal network of consciousness and connections, and your sensory pathway to the outside world.
Image by TheVisualMD
Nerve function in the hand
Nerve function in the hand
Image by TheVisualMD
Hand Eye Coordination
Hand Eye Coordination
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Neurons from Hippocampus
This image shows a group of pyramidal neurons from the CA1 region of the hippocampus, with individual neurons receiving impulses across synapses from below. Creating memories is one of the brain's most remarkable functions. By relying on an intricate network of connected nerves in different parts of the brain, we can record an experience, store it like a biological file stuffed with emotions and sensory legacies and then recall it at will. The hippocampus serves as the hub for making and storing memories.
Image by TheVisualMD
Patellar Reflex (Knee Jerk)
Spinal reflexes are generated by the spinal cord in response to a signal from the PNS, without the need for further processing. Interestingly, you actually can control some reflexes, if you're aware that they're about to occur. For instance, you might very well stop that knee jerk if your favorite pet was directly in the line of fire.
Image by TheVisualMD
Outer and Inner Ear
3D visualization of the inner structures of the ear reconstructed from scanned human data. Sound waves enter the ear through the external auditory meatus (ear canal) where they bounce up against the thin tympanic membrane (eardrum). A vibration moves three very small bones (the ossicles) of the middle ear which, in turn, pass on the vibration to a membrane at the entrance of the middle ear. When this membrane vibrates, it stimulates a pulsating wave through the fluid that fills the cochlea causing a current to pass over millions of small hairs called stereocilia. The stereocilia translate the mechanical movement into sensory impulses which are transmitted directly to the brain. The brain interprets the impulses as sound.
Image by TheVisualMD
Ear Internal Anatomy
3D visualization of the inner structures of the ear reconstructed from scanned human data. Sound waves enter the ear through the external auditory meatus (ear canal) where they bounce up against the thin membranous tympanic membrane (eardrum). This vibration moves three very small bones (the ossicles) of the middle ear which in turn, pass on the vibration to a membrane at the entrance of the middle ear. When this membrane vibrates, it stimulates a pulsating wave through the fluid that fills the cochlea causing a current of vibrations to pass over millions of small hairs called stereocilia. The stereocilia translate the mechanical movement into sensory impulses which are transmitted directly to the brain. The brain interprets the impulses as sound. The mechanisms of the inner ear are also responsible for perception of balance and equilibrium.
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Organ of Corti
Thousands of microscopic hairs that are housed in the organ of corti (meaning \"vibration sensitive\") receive information from these sound waves and translate them into nerve impulses that are sent to the brain.
Image by TheVisualMD
Photosensitive Membranous Discs in the Retina
Within the retina, the light-sensing portion of the eye, photoreceptors, mainly rods and cones, contain hundreds of thousands of membranous discs in their outer segment. For the development of the infant eye, two fats are particularly critical: docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and arachidonic acid (ARA). They are found in breast milk in tiny quantities. Unlike fats that are burned for energy, DHA and ARA play key roles as structural and signaling components in cell membranes in the brain and eye.
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Retina close up cross section
The retina is the innermost layer of the eye and is composed of several layers of neurons interconnected by synapses. The only neurons that are directly sensitive to light are the photoreceptor cells, mainly of two types: rods and cones. Light energy creates an image of the visual world on the retina, triggering nerve impulses that are sent to the visual centers of the brain through the optic nerve.The retina and the optic nerve are really parts of the brain and grow out from it during embryonic development. Two fatty acids found in breast milk are particularly critical for development of the infant eye: docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and arachidonic acid (ARA). Unlike fats that are burned for energy, DHA and ARA play key roles as structural and signaling components in cell membranes in the brain and eye.
Image by TheVisualMD
Sensation and Perception: Crash Course Psychology #5
Video by CrashCourse/YouTube
Somatosensory Cortex
BruceBlaus
Brain Sensory Nerve Communicating with Ear
TheVisualMD
Krause's End Bulb
TheVisualMD
What Makes You Unique
TheVisualMD
Nerve function in the hand
TheVisualMD
Hand Eye Coordination
TheVisualMD
Neurons from Hippocampus
TheVisualMD
Patellar Reflex (Knee Jerk)
TheVisualMD
Outer and Inner Ear
TheVisualMD
Ear Internal Anatomy
TheVisualMD
Organ of Corti
TheVisualMD
Photosensitive Membranous Discs in the Retina
TheVisualMD
Retina close up cross section
TheVisualMD
10:46
Sensation and Perception: Crash Course Psychology #5
CrashCourse/YouTube
Somatosensory Cortex
Parcellation of different cortical regions involved in visual processing
Image by Joly O and Frankó E/Wikimedia
Parcellation of different cortical regions involved in visual processing
Parcellation of different cortical regions involved in visual processing. Some of these regions are particularly involved in binocular vision and some regions are known to show deficits in amblyopes under diverse visual stimulation. Lateral view (A) and ventral view (B) are presented. The 3D rendering (Anatomist, www.brainvisa.info) represents the cortical surface of the Conte69 human surface-based atlas (Van Essen et al., 2012). V1, V2, MT+ as defined by (Fischl et al., 2008), V3A, V3B, V4v, V7, IPS1/2/3/4 as defined by (Swisher et al., 2007), V3d, LO1, LO2, PITd, PITv, as defined by (Kolster et al., 2010), occipitotemporal area BA37, inferior temporal area BA20 available in Caret software (www.nitrc.org/projects/caret/, Van Essen et al., 2001). CalcS, calcarine sulcus; LOS, lateral occipital sulcus; TOS, transverse occipital sulcus; ITG, inferior temporal gyrus; ITS, inferior temporal sulcus; MTG, middle temporal gyrus; STS, superior temporal sulcus; STG, superior temporal gyrus; LF, lateral fissure; OTS, occipitotemporal sulcus; CoS, collateral sulcus; PHG, parahippocampal gyrus; PCG, postcentral gyrus; CS, central sulcus.
Image by Joly O and Frankó E/Wikimedia
Somatosensory Cortex
Somatosensory Cortex
Area of the parietal lobe concerned with receiving sensations such as movement, pain, pressure, position, temperature, touch, and vibration. It lies posterior to the central sulcus.
National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine
Cortical Processing
As described earlier, many of the sensory axons are positioned in the same way as their corresponding receptor cells in the body. This allows identification of the position of a stimulus on the basis of which receptor cells are sending information. The cerebral cortex also maintains this sensory topography in the particular areas of the cortex that correspond to the position of the receptor cells. The somatosensory cortex provides an example in which, in essence, the locations of the somatosensory receptors in the body are mapped onto the somatosensory cortex. This mapping is often depicted using a sensory homunculus (Figure).
The term homunculus comes from the Latin word for "little man" and refers to a map of the human body that is laid across a portion of the cerebral cortex. In the somatosensory cortex, the external genitals, feet, and lower legs are represented on the medial face of the gyrus within the longitudinal fissure. As the gyrus curves out of the fissure and along the surface of the parietal lobe, the body map continues through the thighs, hips, trunk, shoulders, arms, and hands. The head and face are just lateral to the fingers as the gyrus approaches the lateral sulcus. The representation of the body in this topographical map is medial to lateral from the lower to upper body. It is a continuation of the topographical arrangement seen in the dorsal column system, where axons from the lower body are carried in the fasciculus gracilis, whereas axons from the upper body are carried in the fasciculus cuneatus. As the dorsal column system continues into the medial lemniscus, these relationships are maintained. Also, the head and neck axons running from the trigeminal nuclei to the thalamus run adjacent to the upper body fibers. The connections through the thalamus maintain topography such that the anatomic information is preserved. Note that this correspondence does not result in a perfectly miniature scale version of the body, but rather exaggerates the more sensitive areas of the body, such as the fingers and lower face. Less sensitive areas of the body, such as the shoulders and back, are mapped to smaller areas on the cortex.
The Sensory Homunculus
A cartoon representation of the sensory homunculus arranged adjacent to the cortical region in which the processing takes place.
Likewise, the topographic relationship between the retina and the visual cortex is maintained throughout the visual pathway. The visual field is projected onto the two retinae, as described above, with sorting at the optic chiasm. The right peripheral visual field falls on the medial portion of the right retina and the lateral portion of the left retina. The right medial retina then projects across the midline through the optic chiasm. This results in the right visual field being processed in the left visual cortex. Likewise, the left visual field is processed in the right visual cortex (see Figure). Though the chiasm is helping to sort right and left visual information, superior and inferior visual information is maintained topographically in the visual pathway. Light from the superior visual field falls on the inferior retina, and light from the inferior visual field falls on the superior retina. This topography is maintained such that the superior region of the visual cortex processes the inferior visual field and vice versa. Therefore, the visual field information is inverted and reversed as it enters the visual cortex-up is down, and left is right. However, the cortex processes the visual information such that the final conscious perception of the visual field is correct. The topographic relationship is evident in that information from the foveal region of the retina is processed in the center of the primary visual cortex. Information from the peripheral regions of the retina are correspondingly processed toward the edges of the visual cortex. Similar to the exaggerations in the sensory homunculus of the somatosensory cortex, the foveal-processing area of the visual cortex is disproportionately larger than the areas processing peripheral vision.
In an experiment performed in the 1960s, subjects wore prism glasses so that the visual field was inverted before reaching the eye. On the first day of the experiment, subjects would duck when walking up to a table, thinking it was suspended from the ceiling. However, after a few days of acclimation, the subjects behaved as if everything were represented correctly. Therefore, the visual cortex is somewhat flexible in adapting to the information it receives from our eyes (Figure).
Topographic Mapping of the Retina onto the Visual Cortex
The visual field projects onto the retina through the lenses and falls on the retinae as an inverted, reversed image. The topography of this image is maintained as the visual information travels through the visual pathway to the cortex.
The cortex has been described as having specific regions that are responsible for processing specific information; there is the visual cortex, somatosensory cortex, gustatory cortex, etc. However, our experience of these senses is not divided. Instead, we experience what can be referred to as a seamless percept. Our perceptions of the various sensory modalities-though distinct in their content-are integrated by the brain so that we experience the world as a continuous whole.
In the cerebral cortex, sensory processing begins at the primary sensory cortex, then proceeds to an association area, and finally, into a multimodal integration area. For example, the visual pathway projects from the retinae through the thalamus to the primary visual cortex in the occipital lobe. This area is primarily in the medial wall within the longitudinal fissure. Here, visual stimuli begin to be recognized as basic shapes. Edges of objects are recognized and built into more complex shapes. Also, inputs from both eyes are compared to extract depth information. Because of the overlapping field of view between the two eyes, the brain can begin to estimate the distance of stimuli based on binocular depth cues.
Ascending Sensory Pathways of the Spinal Cord
The dorsal column system and spinothalamic tract are the major ascending pathways that connect the periphery with the brain.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (3)
Somatosensory Cortex
Motor and Sensory Regions of the Cerebral Cortex
Image by BruceBlaus
Explicit timing in the brain
Explicit timing in the brain. Cortical and subcortical brain regions involved in the overt estimation of elapsed time (explicit timing). The functional role of different areas in the diverse information processing stages is also specified.
Image by Piras F, Piras F, Ciullo V, Danese E, Caltagirone C and Spalletta G/Wikimedia
Sensory Receptors
Video by Teacher's Pet/YouTube
Somatosensory Cortex
BruceBlaus
Explicit timing in the brain
Piras F, Piras F, Ciullo V, Danese E, Caltagirone C and Spalletta G/Wikimedia
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Somatosensation
Somatosensation is a mixed sensory category and includes all sensation received from the skin and mucous membranes, as well from as the limbs and joints. Somatosensation is also known as tactile sense, or more familiarly, as the sense of touch.