somatic sensation
Noun: 1. A conscious feeling or perception arising from stimulation of the body's sensory receptors. This is the general perception of bodily feelings, including touch, pressure, temperature, pain, and the sense of body position and movement (proprioception). It encompasses sensations from the skin, muscles, joints, and internal organs. Example: The somatic sensation of warmth from the sun was pleasant.
The term "somatic sensation" is used in medical, psychological, and scientific contexts to describe the broad category of physical feelings originating from the body, as opposed to sensations from the special senses (like sight or hearing) or purely mental states. * The study focused on how the brain processes somatic sensation. * After the injury, she experienced altered somatic sensations in her arm.
- Clinical/Neurological Context: Used to discuss sensory deficits or abnormalities, such as loss of somatic sensation following nerve damage or a stroke.
- Somesthesia (noun): A direct synonym for somatic sensation, often used in technical writing.
- Somatosensory (adjective): Relating to or denoting a sensation that can be localized in a specific area of the body. Used in terms like "somatosensory cortex" (the brain region processing these signals).
- Proprioception (noun): A specific type of somatic sensation related to the relative position of one's own body parts and strength of effort being employed in movement.
- Kinesthesia (noun): The sensation of movement, often considered a component of somatic sensation/proprioception.
- Bodily sensation
- Somesthesia
- Somatosensory perception
- Tactile sensation (though this is more specific to the sense of touch)
- Special sensation (e.g., vision, audition, olfaction)
- Mental state (e.g., emotion, thought)
- the perception of tactual or proprioceptive or gut sensations
- he relied on somesthesia to warn him of pressure changes