Sensation
Perception
Varies depending on where sensory impulses are sent in the CNS.
Sensory modality
Somatic (touch, pressure, vibration, warmth, cold, pain, itch, tickle, proprioception) and visceral senses
Smell, taste, vision, hearing, and equilibrium
Stimulation, transduction, generation of impulses, and integration
Simple
Complex
By producing receptor potentials
Adaptation is the decrease in sensitivity during a long-lasting stimulus. Receptors can be rapidly or slowly adapting.
Tactile sensations (touch, pressure, vibration, itch, tickle), thermal sensations (warmth, cold), pain, and proprioception
In the skin, subcutaneous tissue, and mucous membranes of the mouth, vagina, and anus
Tactile corpuscles of touch (rapidly adapting) and hair root plexuses, and slowly adapting nonencapsulated sensory corpuscles
Nonencapsulated sensory corpuscles and lamellar corpuscles
Tactile corpuscles and lamellar corpuscles
Free nerve endings (itch, tickle, thermoreceptors)
Cold receptors are in the stratum basale of the epidermis; warm receptors are in the dermis
Pain
A
C
In muscles, tendons, joints, and the inner ear
First-order, second-order, and third-order neurons
The cerebellum and reticular formation of the brainstem.
The posterior column–medial lemniscus pathway
The anterolateral pathway
Through the trigeminothalamic pathway
They are received by specific regions of the primary somatosensory cortex (postcentral gyrus) in the cerebrum
The anterior and posterior spinocerebellar tracts
Motor neurons that control movement and are the final common pathway for movement control
Local circuit neurons, upper motor neurons, basal nuclei neurons, and cerebellar neurons
The precentral gyrus of the brain, which is the major control region for voluntary movements
Direct pathways (corticospinal and corticobulbar pathways) and indirect pathways (rubrospinal, tectospinal, vestibulospinal, reticulospinal tracts)
They convey nerve impulses from the motor cortex to skeletal muscles in the limbs and trunk
Skeletal muscles in the head
It helps with learning and performing rapid, coordinated, highly skilled movements, and maintaining balance and posture
The suprachiasmatic nucleus and the reticular activating system
Four stages
A state of unconsciousness where an individual has little or no response to stimuli
The process of storing and retrieving information learned