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Sensory processing is our ability to take in information through our senses (touch, movement, smell, taste, vision, and hearing), interpret that information, and organize a meaningful response. For most children this process is automatic.
Sensory processing is the process that organizes and distinguishes sensation (sensory information) from one's own body and the environment, thus making it possible to use the body effectively within the environment.
Sensory processing describes the way the body receives and interprets incoming stimuli through our senses. Our sensory systems play an important role in our ability to engage in the world around us.
31 paź 2023 · Four aspects of sensory information are encoded by sensory systems: the type of stimulus, the location of the stimulus in the receptive field, the duration of the stimulus, and the relative intensity of the stimulus. Thus, action potentials transmitted over a sensory receptor’s afferent axons encode one type of stimulus.
Sensory processing is a broad term that refers to the ability of processing and organising sensations for daily functioning (Watts, Stagnitti, & Brown, 2014).
1 sty 2021 · Definition. Sensory processing is a general term that describes the way that the central and peripheral nervous systems manage incoming sensory stimuli and allows for an organized and adaptive response to the presented sensory information (Lane et al. 2000).
Sensory processing refers to the way individuals with ASD perceive and respond to sensory information from their environment. It plays a significant role in their adaptive behavior, attention skills, and overall clinical characteristics.