Page:Structure and functions of the body; a hand-book of anatomy and physiology for nurses and others desiring a practical knowledge of the subject (IA structurefunctio00fiskrich).pdf/53

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transmission of sensations of touch to the brain the sensation is localized and the tactile sensation becomes a tactile perception.

There are three main divisions of the sense of touch: 1. sensations of touch proper or tactile sensation; 2. sensations of temperature, and 3. sensations of pain. The temperature sense is the transmission by the skin of sensations not so much of a certain degree of heat or cold as of the difference between the temperature of an object and that of the skin. The longer an object is in contact with the skin, the less conscious the person is of it, not only because it becomes of the same temperature, but also because he becomes accustomed to it. There also seem to be in the skin, besides the touch corpuscles, two other terminal organs with separate nerve fibers, the one for detecting heat, the other cold; for there are places on the body where heat can be detected and cold cannot, and vice versa.

Sensations of pain may be merely an exaggeration of tactile sensation, as in too hard pressure or too great heat, but there seems to be also a sensation of pain in the skin. All organs are said to have common sensibility to pain and any exaggeration of this sensibility causes a sensation of pain. All the special senses require a certain amount of judgment in the interpretation of the sensations they convey.