Senses
Sight - the ability of the brain and eye to detect electromagnetic waves within the visible range (light) interpreting the image as "sight."
Low Light Vision
Night Vision
Hearing - the sense of sound perception.
Highly Sensitive Auditory Receptors
Taste - one of the two main "chemical" senses. There are at least four types of tastes[4] that "buds" (receptors) on the tongue detect.
Smell - the other "chemical" sense. Unlike taste, there are hundreds of olfactory receptors, each binding to a particular molecular feature.
Highly Sensitive Olfactory Receptors
Touch - the sense of pressure perception, generally in the skin.
Balance and acceleration - Balance, Equilibrioception, or vestibular sense, is the sense which allows an organism to sense body movement, direction, and acceleration, and to attain and maintain postural equilibrium and balance.
Temperature - Thermoception is the sense of heat and the absence of heat (cold) by the skin and including internal skin passages
Kinesthetic sense - Proprioception, the kinesthetic sense, provides the parietal cortex of the brain with information on the relative positions of the parts of the body.
Pain - Nociception (physiological pain) signals near-damage or damage to tissue.
Reduced Pain Receptors