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sensasjon

Sensasjon is a term used in Norwegian (and related Scandinavian languages) meaning sensation. It refers to both the physiological process by which sensory receptors detect stimuli and the subjective experience of those stimuli. In everyday language, sensasjon can also denote something remarkable or exciting—a media sensation or a public sensation.

In science, sensation begins with sensory receptors that detect specific types of energy: light for vision,

Sensation and perception are related but distinct. Sensation is the raw input gathered by receptors, whereas

In medical contexts, terms related to sensasjon include hypoesthesia (reduced sensitivity), hyperesthesia (increased sensitivity), anesthesia (loss

Culturally, sensasjon is also used to describe something that arouses widespread interest or emotion, such as

sound
for
audition,
chemical
molecules
for
taste
and
smell,
and
mechanical
or
thermal
stimuli
for
touch,
proprioception,
and
temperature.
Receptors
transduce
this
energy
into
neural
signals
that
are
transmitted
to
the
brain
via
sensory
pathways.
The
brain
then
interprets
these
signals
to
generate
perception
and
awareness.
Different
sensory
modalities
operate
with
their
own
thresholds
and
patterns
of
adaptation;
the
concept
of
an
absolute
threshold
refers
to
the
minimum
stimulus
required
for
detection,
while
a
difference
threshold
pertains
to
the
smallest
detectable
change
in
a
stimulus.
perception
is
the
brain’s
interpretation
of
that
input,
influenced
by
attention,
memory,
expectations,
and
context
through
bottom-up
and
top-down
processing.
of
sensation),
and
dysesthesia
(unpleasant
abnormal
sensation).
Sensation
can
be
studied
across
sensory
modalities,
as
well
as
within
clinical
assessments
of
sensory
function.
a
sensational
news
story
or
a
sensational
achievement.