Gross motor ability refers to the movement of large parts of your body. For example, swinging your arms is a gross motor activity.
In contrast, fine motor activity refers to more detailed movements made with smaller parts of your body. For example, moving your fingers to pick up something small requires fine motor activity.
Infants typically develop control over gross motor movements before fine motor movements. Example, they can swing their arms and kick their legs before they are able to pinch something between their thumb and forefinger.
• Motor Fitness refers to the ability of an athlete to perform successfully at their sport. The components of motor fitness are: * Agility * Balance * Co-ordination * Power * Reaction Time
motor ability is a ability to perform vegrous motor skills.
No- then it wouldn't be athletic ability
Loss of the motor ability that enables speech.
The motor cortex.
Mary Kathryn Scott has written: 'The motor performance and motor learning rates in the non-dominant hand of children as a function of laterality, age, and sex' -- subject(s): Left- and right-handedness, Motor ability in children, Motor ability, Motor learning
Donna Cech has written: 'Functional movement development across the life span' -- subject(s): Motor ability, Motor ability in children
Akinesia is the loss of the ability to control motor muscles.
It is a motor ability test
Mary Frances Hall has written: 'A study of two methods of teaching bowling to college women of high and low motor ability' -- subject(s): Bowling, Motor ability
Raymond Fidalis Moss has written: 'Motor specificity in the mentally retarded' -- subject(s): Children with mental disabilities, Ability testing, Motor ability in children, Reaction time
Psychomotor abilities are abilities that require both thought and motor skills. For example, hand-eye coordination is a psychomotor ability because it requires your brain's visual processing to communicate with your hand's movement.
Ryan W. Long has written: 'Using cueing strategies in golf to induce trust of a motor program' -- subject(s): Golf, Motor ability, Psychological aspects, Psychological aspects of Golf, Psychological aspects of Motor ability, Trust