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Quali e quanti sono veramente i nostri sensi

What and how many are our senses really?

At school, we were taught that we have 5 senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch, and taste. But science today suggests that the ways our body perceives and interacts with the environment are more numerous, and their functioning is linked to emotions.

What are our senses and how do they work?

We can define the senses as complex biological systems that allow us to perceive and interpret information from the surrounding environment and from our own body through specialized organs called sense organs.

The senses function thanks to transduction, the ability to convert physical or chemical stimuli from the environment into electrical signals that the brain can interpret. Specialized receptors (such as photoreceptors for sight or hair cells for hearing) “capture” environmental stimuli and transduce them into nerve impulses. These are transmitted via nerves to the brain, where cerebral processing occurs, interpreting the signals as perception.

The five classic senses

What and how many are our senses reallyAs humans, we traditionally remember our five main senses:

  • Sight, which allows us to perceive light and colors through the eyes
  • Hearing, which enables us to detect sound waves via the ears
  • Smell, through which we recognize odors via the nose
  • Taste, which allows us to distinguish flavors using the tongue and palate
  • Touch, through which we can perceive pressure, temperature, and various textures and consistencies via the skin

Sensory education with the Patrizio Paoletti Foundation

The senses play a fundamental role in education because they allow us to explore the world. Sensory education is central in AIS Assisi International School of the Patrizio Paoletti Foundation, which emphasizes exploration in learning within an innovative educational plan that integrates Third Millennium Pedagogy and the Montessori method. Sensory education becomes education for reading, interpreting, and transforming the world, based on curiosity, openness, and education for a passionate life, fully engaging the body and our senses, which is at the heart of the Patrizio Paoletti Foundation’s motto: Live passionately!

The senses are the doors through which a child explores and understands the world, as well as the foundation for the development of intelligences, since skills arise from direct and concrete experience. The senses are true learning tools and fundamental in Montessori educational units:

  • Sight participates in activities requiring observation, such as creating maps and recognizing shapes and colors
  • Hearing is stimulated by bells or sound boxes containing small objects, whose movement generates different noises
  • Smell is trained by discovering the various scents of spices, essences, or flowers in multisensory gardening experiences
  • Taste is stimulated through tastings and flavor variations, including games to guess and recognize sweet, bitter, or salty flavors
  • Touch is central in sensory and fine manipulation activities, perceiving different textures or natural materials

At all ages

Sensory education is a tool for global health at all ages and is also fundamental in old age, helping maintain an active brain, promoting social interaction, and preventing neurodegeneration. Stimulating the senses and involving them in artistic experience and practice is central in the AIDA Alzheimer patients Interaction through Digital and Arts project, coordinated by the Patrizio Paoletti Foundation, which focuses on digital, museum, and creative innovation for the well-being of Alzheimer patients and their families.

Senses and meditation

Sensory education as “listening,” internal and external, plays a key role in meditation, for example in focused attention meditation, which requires prolonged attention on an object, or in the Quadrato Motor Training, a movement meditation practice developed by Patrizio Paoletti and studied at the RINED Research Institute of the Patrizio Paoletti Foundation. It requires constant attentiveness and listening and has shown important cerebral, molecular, and functional benefits, including protection of brain connectivity in Parkinson’s disease.

Some lesser-known senses

In addition to the five classic senses, science has progressively identified other perception systems, such as:

  • Proprioception, the ability to perceive the body in space, allowing, for example, to touch the right elbow with the left hand while keeping the eyes closed
  • Vestibular sense, which enables balance and perception of acceleration in space
  • Nociception, the ability to perceive harmful stimuli such as pain
  • Thermoception, the ability to perceive temperature, distinct from touch, with specific receptors for hot and cold
  • Echolocation, the ability to understand the surrounding environment based on echo reflection, which depends on hearing but functions perceptually more like sight
  • Electroreception, the ability to perceive electric fields, common in animals and, in rudimentary form, also in humans

Do we have a “sixth sense”?

The famous “sixth sense,” an archaic form of human intuition, could correspond to magnetoreception or geomagnetic sense, the ability to perceive magnetic fields, especially the Earth’s. Research from Caltech – California Institute of Technology, published in Science, suggests that this sense, typical of migratory birds, may also exist in humans, potentially enhancing orientation skills.

However, the “sixth sense” could also refer to human intuition or empathy, which allows us to form an emotional bridge with other living beings, facilitating connection, communication, collaboration, and shared well-being.

Senses and emotions

Moreover, the functioning of the senses is deeply influenced by emotions and vice versa, because the limbic system, which processes emotions, is connected to the brain’s sensory areas. Sensory information affects emotions, for example, a scent can reactivate memories and related emotions. Likewise, emotions shape our sensory perception, for example:

  • Fear can narrow the visual field, focusing attention on potential dangers
  • Happiness can make colors appear more vivid and bright
  • Stress and anxiety can make us hypersensitive to unpleasant sounds or smells
  • Anxiety amplifies the perception of pain, while happiness diminishes it

By cultivating and enhancing our emotional intelligence, we can become aware of how our inner world influences the perception of the world around us and even consciously contextualize and modulate, to some extent, our sensory perceptions. Senses and emotions are closely connected, weaving together our experiences, supporting higher cognitive processes, thoughts, and feelings. By combining senses and emotions, we truly “feel” life in a holistic, circular dimension that integrates body, mind, and emotional world.

Brain functioning, Emotions and relationships for growing together, Functioning and mangement of emotions, Know your brain and your mind, News from neuroscience, Promuovere l’intelligenza emotiva

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