Guest guest Posted July 17, 2004 Report Share Posted July 17, 2004 Very interesting Debi, I have not got a chance to research this. Thanks for the information, I am going to do some research on this. Pennie Abby's Mom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 17, 2004 Report Share Posted July 17, 2004 Okay, page 380 of " An Introduction to Brain and Behavior " by Kolb and Ian Whishaw states: " The somatosensory system in unique among sensory systems because it is distributed throughout the body; it is not just localized in the head as are vision, hearing, taste, and smell. " I know head and brain are different, but each of them deciphers the information inside the brain. I couldn't find anything on smell. I know with vision, the cones and rods in the retina perceive various parts of vision, and various cells in the tongue process taste. Maybe the nose doesn't have those specialized cells, but I'm only guessing. If you're like me and don't know what somatosensory system is, it's nocioception (pain and temperature), hapsis (fine touch and pressure), and proprioception (body awareness). One other thing that some of us may or may not know, it talked about a woman with seizure activity who had the diseased section removed which left her essentially deaf to words. She, however, responded appropriately when songs were sung to her asking questions. I thought of our kids. Allie's teacher in the 3 yr old autism class often sung to the kids rather than speaking. Often times, she got more response from the singing. Debi > > I didnt know that smell was the only sense that is directly linked > to the > > brain. I will have to do some research on that. Very > interesting....... > > > > Pennie > > Abby's Mom > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 18, 2004 Report Share Posted July 18, 2004 When A. was in early intervention, the teachers sometimes used scents, especially during snack, to try to reach the children. One little girl in particular was quite calm and focused after the staff sliced a fragrant lemon. I've heard several OTs say that smell (would that be an olfactory nerve) is the only sense directly connected to the brain. Sight, taste, hearing, touch , are all routed through something else first. I've never researched, though. > Very interesting Debi, I have not got a chance to research this. Thanks for > the information, I am going to do some research on this. > > Pennie > Abby's Mom > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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