No, Since somatic sensory and somatic motor neurons both have their cell bodies in the spinal cord, their chances of surviving and developing new axons are similar.
A subsystem for the detection of mechanical stimuli (such as light touch, vibration, pressure, and cutaneous tension) and a subsystem for the detection of painful stimuli and temperature make up the two main parts of the somatic sensory system. Humans have a somatic sensory cortex in the parietal lobe that is divided into four different sections, or fields, called Brodmann's areas 3a, 3b, 1, and 2. All four areas are involved in the processing of tactile input, even though area 3b is typically thought of as the major somatic sensory cortex (also known as SI). Somatic sensations are processed by the main somatosensory cortex. These sensations are produced by receptors located all over the body that sense touch, temperature, nociception (pain), and proprioception (a body's position in space).
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