Senses Essay

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    Part I A) I do believe that there are senses within us, but they are different versions of the five senses. I believe that hunger is an automatic response of the body. I think that hunger is a sensation, and there is a level of perception and awareness attached to it. I, personally, believe that the senses are only related to the 5 senses. Hunger, I would still believe to be categorized as a sense in the same way that the 5 senses receive information.

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    Body Senses Chapter 4

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    The big topic of chapter 4 is our senses and understanding how they work within our bodies and affect how we live our lives. The chapter starts out by defining sensation and perception, giving the reader a basic understanding of the concepts in the chapter before getting into specifics. Receptor cells are discussed, as they are located in all of the sense organs of the bodies, which, when stimulated, send neural impulses into the brain so the brain can identify and interpret what is happening. This

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    Sense Perception Reflection “We see and understand things not as they are but as we are” Discuss this claim in relation to perception. Knowledge Question: To what extent does our sense perception limit the way we perceive reality? Word Count: 800 Knowledge is an extensive concept which has no precise definition since it has no end or limit. In a constantly changing world, several individuals have different upbringings, prejudices, viewpoints and the way we perceive or understand certain things

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    Consequences of Losing The Sense of Touch Touch is the first sense we experience in the womb and may also be the last we experience before death. To understand the consequences of losing the sense of touch we must first understand its benefits. Touch is an important element of how we understand and relate to our world. Touch can convey personal feeling towards one another or it can convey danger such as heat or sharp surfaces. The inability to feel sensations on the ski impacts many different

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    A Human 's Five Senses

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    A human’s five senses are normally separate from each other, with no one particular sense having an exact and direct relation to another. This statement is true for most, but not for everyone. There are individuals who experience a condition called synesthesia, in which two or more of the five senses can possibly trigger one another. Oftentimes people with this condition do not realize that their perception differs from most people around them. Two people, one with this condition and one without

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    Traditionally the five senses are sight (ophthalmoception), hearing (audioception), taste (gustaoception), smell (olfacoception or olfacception), and touch (tactioception) . The senses first start to develop when the baby is still growing inside the womb. Sight baby care Unless vision impairment, babies can see from birth. However they may not be able to distinguish similar tones such as red and orange. Black and white are boldest of color contrasts and are some of the only colors newborn's can

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    What I learned about the sense sight is, that the brain uses sets of neurons to decipher images. The neurons used by the brain are called Visual Maps. One visual map is receptive to color and form, while another visual map is only receptive to motion or movement. Another interesting fact that I got from the article was, that there are small cells in the back of the eyeballs called cones. Cones enable the ability for one to see colors. Damage, or mutations in Cone Cells can cause one to be colorblind

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    Learning through Senses Helen’s physical senses play a role in her learning, by using her senses that she capable of using. Even though she lost two of her senses, sight, speech, and hearing. She still had other senses that she used to communicate with others. Again, Helen Keller use the sense of touch mainly to learn and communicate with her family. Her teacher, Anne Sullivan, was able to communicate with the girl's brain and mind through a sense of touch. She later spelled out words on

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    Jonathan Ortiz Gabriel Diaz Glenn Holland Tok Final Exam Language and five senses Language does interfere with the way we see knowledge. For example, we use metaphors to talk about the world in both familiar and innovative ways, and in contexts ranging from everyday conversation to literature and scientific theorizing. One example of a metaphor that interferes with the way we think is "she is fishing in troubled waters" this metaphor doesn't mean that the person is actually fishing, this

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    Sense perception can be defined as how we see and interpret the world through our five senses – sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell. They are an important source of knowledge since they enable us most of the times to be conscious of the outside world. Perception consists of both sensation and interpretation. Sensation is the stimulation of a sensory receptor which produces neural impulses which the brain then interprets as visual image, sound, taste, pain, etc. Interpretation is how the information

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