Sight: The sense to see.
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Smell: The sense to feel a good or bad fragrance that goes up your nose when something has an aroma, odor or smell that it gives off
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Taste: The sensation in which one's mouth consumes food.
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Touch: The sensation to feel on skin when something or someone touches you or you touch someone or something.
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Sound: The ability and sense to hear sounds that go through your ear.
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Pressure: The sensation of stress or strain, compression, expansion, pull, or shear, usually caused by a force in the environment. Pressure receptors may interlock or overlap with pain receptors so that one sensation is accompanied by the other. The pressure sense is similar to the sensation of contact.
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Itch: A general sensation arising from the irritation of skin cells or nerve cells associated with the skin. Pruritus serves as an important sensory and self-protective mechanism, as other skin sensations such as touch, pain, vibration, cold and heat.
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Thermoception: The sensation and perception of temperature, or more accurately, temperature differences inferred from heat flux (different levels of heat). Thermoreceptors are free nerve endings within the skin, liver, skeletal muscles, and the hypothalamus.
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Proprioception: The sense of self-movement and body position. Its describes as the sixth sense when you feel someone or something around and you don't have to know without looking. It can also represent your gut feeling or the inner feeling you gain when something around you is about to go wrong.
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Tension Sensors: These sensors are used to measure the dynamical tension in a moving yarn and regulate the tension of the yarn on a winding machine.
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Nociception: The sense to detect painful stimuli or when something hurts.
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Equilibrioception: The sense of balance and spatial orientation. It helps prevent humans and animals from falling over when standing or moving.
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Stretch receptors: The state of the muscle and return the information to the central nervous system. Stretch receptors are sensitive to the velocity of the movement of the muscle and the change in length of the muscle.
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Chemoreceptors: These receptors are sensors that detect changes in CO2, O2, and pH, and have been classified, based upon anatomical location, as either central or peripheral.
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Thirst: The sense of dryness in the mouth and throat associated with a desire for liquids due to huge amounts of dehydration.
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Hunger: A sense that motivates the consumption of food when your stomach feels empty and starving.
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Magnetoreception: The sensation of feeling something or someone close to you due to our magnetic field that perceives direction, altitude and location.
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Time: An ability to feel the lapse of time and to estimate and compare intervals especially of short duration.
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