Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDiane Shona Skinner Modified over 9 years ago
1
The Five Senses UT College of Medicine Student to Student Program
2
The Five Senses These are the special tools your body uses to discover the world around it.
3
The Five Senses TOUCH Hearing Sight Taste Smell
4
Touch Touch is to use your skin to have physical contact with something else. Nerves are like wires that relay messages to the brain Nerves in the skin send information about: –Pressure –Temperature –Pain –Vibration.
5
Touch Information from our skin travels up the spinal cord to the brain. Each nerve carries information from one part of the body.
6
Touch Some areas of the body are more sensitive to touch than others.
7
Touch This sensory map shows that the brain touch area is dedicated to some body parts more than others.
8
The Five Senses Touch HEARING Sight Taste Smell
9
Hearing Our ears allow us to understand sounds. The external ear captures sound, while the internal portion processes it.
10
Hearing Tiny bones in the ear create vibrations in fluid. These ripples are detected by delicate hairs, and signals are sent to the brain.
11
Hearing The ears also contain vestibular organs that give us our sense of balance. When these get messed up, you become dizzy (think of car sickness!)
12
Hearing Loss Some hearing losses are congenital (born with). Others occur through disease or with the aging process.
13
Hearing Loss
14
The Five Senses Touch Hearing SIGHT Taste Smell
15
Sight The eye is the organ that captures light.
16
Sight
17
Color Blindness
18
Protecting your Vision
19
Sunglasses protect your eyes from the sun’s harmful UV rays.
20
Vision Loss Braille is a special form of writing for those who are blind, where people “read” using touch.
21
The Five Senses Touch Hearing Sight TASTE Smell
22
Taste The tongue is the organ that allows us to taste. Taste buds contain the nerves that send signals to the brain.
23
Taste Different areas of the tongue detect certain types of taste
24
Tongue Piercing Piercing increases the risk of infection. Metal piercings can also damage your teeth.
25
The Five Senses Touch Hearing Sight Taste SMELL
26
Smell The nose contains the nerves that allow us to smell.
27
Smell
28
Taste and Smell The senses of taste and smell are closely related. For example, foods sometimes taste different when we have colds and stuffed up noses.
29
The Brain
30
The Five Senses Our senses let us explore our world. It is important that we protect them.
31
Any Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.