§ Touch: This has been found to be distinct from
pressure, temperature, pain, and even itch sensors.
§ Pressure: Obvious sense is obvious.
§ Itch: Surprisingly, this is a distinct sensor system
from other touch-related senses.
§ Thermoception: Ability to sense heat and cold.
This also is thought of as more than one sense. This is not just because
of the two hot/cold receptors, but also because there is a completely different
type of thermoceptor, in terms of the mechanism for detection, in the
brain. These thermoceptors in the brain are used for monitoring internal
body temperature.
§ Sound: Detecting vibrations along some medium, such as
air or water that is in contact with your ear drums.
§ Smell: Yet another of the sensors that work off of a
chemical reaction. This sense combines with taste to produce flavors.
§ Proprioception: This sense gives you the ability to
tell where your body parts are, relative to other body parts. This sense
is one of the things police officers test when they pull over someone who they
think is driving drunk. The “close your eyes and touch your nose” test is
testing this sense. This sense is used all the time in little ways, such
as when you scratch an itch on your foot, but never once look at your foot to
see where your hand is relative to your foot.
§ Tension Sensors: These are found in such places as
your muscles and allow the brain the ability to monitor muscle tension.
§ Nociception: In a word, pain. This was once
thought to simply be the result of overloading other senses, such as “touch”,
but this has been found not to be the case and instead, it is its own unique
sensory system. There are three distinct types of pain receptors:
cutaneous (skin), somatic (bones and joints), and visceral (body organs).
§ Equilibrioception: The sense that allows you to
keep your balance and sense body movement in terms of acceleration and
directional changes. This sense also allows for perceiving gravity.
The sensory system for this is found in your inner ears and is called the
vestibular labyrinthine system. Anyone who’s ever had this sense go out
on them on occasion knows how important this is. When it’s not working or
malfunctioning, you literally can’t tell up from down and moving from one
location to another without aid is nearly impossible.
§ Stretch Receptors: These are found in such places as
the lungs, bladder, stomach, and the gastrointestinal tract. A type of
stretch receptor, that senses dilation of blood vessels, is also often involved
in headaches.
§ Chemoreceptors: These trigger an area of the medulla
in the brain that is involved in detecting blood born hormones and drugs.
It also is involved in the vomiting reflex.
§ Thirst: This system more or less allows your body to
monitor its hydration level and so your body knows when it should tell you to
drink.
§ Hunger: This system allows your body to detect when
you need to eat something.
§ Magnetoception: This is the ability to detect magnetic
fields, which is principally useful in providing a sense of direction when
detecting the Earth’s magnetic field. Unlike most birds, humans do not
have a strong magentoception, however, experiments have demonstrated that we do
tend to have some sense of magnetic fields. The mechanism for this is not
completely understood; it is theorized that this has something to do with
deposits of ferric iron in our noses. This would make sense if that is
correct as humans who are given magnetic implants have been shown to have a
much stronger magnetoception than humans without.
§ Time: This one is debated as no singular mechanism has
been found that allows people to perceive time. However, experimental
data has conclusively shown humans have a startling accurate sense of time,
particularly when younger. The mechanism we use for this seems to be a
distributed syste
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