Visual & Visual Motor System
Motor functions, Coordination, Reach, and Grasp
Motor System
Muscle Tone, Reflexes, and Postural Control
Mobility
100
Being able to jump your eyes from point to point in order to take in the visual environment.
What is Saccades
100
These are the three receptors that feedback comes from.
What is proprioceptors, visual receptors, and vestibular receptors?
100
The ability to regulate or direct mechanisms for movement.
What is motor control?
100
These are the three characteristics of a reflex.
What is voluntary, stereotypical, and predictable?
100
This occurs when spinal interneurons send axons across midline to inhibit muscle activation on the opposite side of the body.
What is crossed inhibition?
200
A voluntary eye movement designed to track a moving stimulus.
What is smooth pursuits?
200
These two organs detect linear movement of the head.
What is Utricles and Saccules?
200
This part of the brain is responsible for planning and initiating movement.
What is Supplementary motor cortex?
200
This is an example of a disynaptic reflex
What is reciprocal inhibition?
200
This part of the brain can override crossed inhibition and send a voluntary, goal-directed movement.
What is motor cortex?
300
These ocular muscles are used for looking up and to the right in each eye.
What is right superior rectus and left inferior oblique?
300
A lesion in this cortex results in optic ataxia.
What is Posterior Parietal Cortex?
300
This disease has symptoms of bradykinesia, rigidity, resting tremors, and impaired balance.
What is Parkinson's Disease?
300
These muscles are active during the hip strategy for postural control.
What is Gastrocnemius, hamstrings, paraspinals, quads, and abs?
300
This sensory feedback system allows you to change gait to accommodate in response to the environment.
What is Reactive feedback
400
This occurs when medial rectus is weak, deviating the eye outward.
What is Exotropia?
400
This in-hand manipulation occurs when the object is rotated between 180 degrees and 360 degrees using independent movements of the finger and the thumb.
What is Complex Rotation?
400
This part of the brain is more concerned with visually triggered and guided movements and rapid motor learning in response to errors.
What is the Cerebellum?
400
Sea sickness arises due to this conflict.
What is sensory?
400
A disorder affecting the cerebellum would cause this type of gait with staggering and a wide base of support.
What is Ataxic Gait?
500
This is the area of the brain that controls the horizontal movements of saccades in the eyes.
What is Paramedian Pontine Reticular Formation (PPRF)?
500
After a stroke, these are the three maladaptations for the upper extremity during reaching.
What is excessive scapular elevation, contralateral trunk flexion, and shoulder abduction and elbow flexion?
500
This form of apraxia is the inability to imitate gestures or perform a task on command.
What is Ideomotor Apraxia?
500
This sensory system provides us positional reference with respect to the environment.
What is the visual system?
500
This type of gait appears stooped with head and neck forward, flexion of the knees, and festination
What is Parkinsonian Gait?
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