News1 min ago
Losing your stomach
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No best answer has yet been selected by dk_psy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Do we really need to introduce something mysical to explain something perfectly sensible?
Like a dog's, your belly and insides just hang there. In our case they all sit on top of the gumph above our pelvis as opposed to hanging down below our ribs (dogs). They're not really held in place too tightly by anything.
When we go over a bump, they are thrown up in the air a wee dod like anything unattached.
Each part of our body passes info back to the brain about where in space it is so if we hold our arm aloft then even if we don't remember (or see) it being lifted then we can *sense* that it's lifted. Our organs can also give info about their relative position.
lol, I love it when you interject, stevie21, while not actually knowing what you're talking about. It is a seperate sense, not an extension of touch. There are quite a few people who have touch intact but who lack this sixth sense and who fall into a crumpled heap without visual cues as to their bodily position.
No offence, but a quick pointer for using Answerbank, since you seem to be doing this all the time- instead of just trying to trample over people's posts with your own guesswork, try to inform yourself, even just a little, and then post. It'll stop us all getting bored with your 'offerings'.
The vestibular system that Clanad mentions and how it can become confused with the proprioceptor system is detailed in the 'Mixed up in Space' link within this article which details the sixth sense I was talking about:
http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/bb/neuro/neuro02/web2/slee.html
"There are quite a few people who have touch intact but who lack this sixth sense"
Is this possibly akin to saying "speech is completely separate from being able to pronounce the letter R. Jonathan Woss can do one but not the other" ?
Could it be that it's part of the touch sense, part that works in most but not in others?
Also, as unlikely as this is, would it then be possible to have this sixth "where in space" sense intact but have no other sense of touch?
I have to say i thought it was obvious.
The body organs hang in there and stretch the peritoneum and this gives an idea - but only an idea [marges sixth sense i thought oK and not mystical at all] of where they are.
When you go in a dive there is an acceleration (in the opposite direction)and therefore a force upwards and the peritoneum is not tweaked as much as before giving the sensation.
All this comes from the cat righting reflex research in the seventies. Researcher holds kitty paws up and lets go, and the kitty rights the head using visual cues and vestibular cues and then rights the body, using der daaah cues from the peritoneum.
Read a modern edition of ganong's phys - most of the ABers seem to have.