Your right brain is on the right side of your head. However, the motor cortex (or motor strip) controls movements on the left side of your body.
The right brain is more involved in spatial activities, overall, whereas the left brain has more involvement with speech and language (Broca's and Wernicke's areas).
The right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, and the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body.
The left side of the brain deals more with language and helps to analyze information given to the brain. If you injure the left side of the brain, you're aware that things aren't working (the right hemisphere is doing its job) but are unable to solve complex problems or do a complex activity.
Left Side of the Brain was created on 2007-05-22.
The right side of your brain is referred to as a hemisphere. This side is also known as the creative side of the brain.
The brain is (in effect) cross-wired; the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body, and the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body. The heart is controlled by the brain stem witch is mid-line and at the bottom.
you use your mouse and brain
If we are a righty then we generally use the right part of our brain scarcely
girls use their brain as any normal person does ,
If someone had a stroke and could not use the right side of their body, the stroke likely occurred in the left side of their brain. This is because nerve fibers in the brain cross over, meaning the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body and vice versa.
the Left Side.
You use both. The left side of the brain controls the right side of the body and vice versa so you need to use both to walk with both feet.
just use the things on the side of your head and use your brain
They use both.
For an extreme draw you put the heaviest weights on the heel side. For a mid draw you put one heavy weight on the heel side and the other on the right side of the middle.
as with drawing anything, best way is to learn to draw what your eyes see and not what your brain tries to tell your it sees - your brain works by having you draw from past memories or preconceptions of what something "should" look like rather than what you actually see - the book "drawing on the right side of the brain" teaches you how to draw naturally what you really see - once you master this you can draw anything no matter how complex and you will find the human figure is no more difficult to draw than anything else
draw a oval with squiggles inside of it.
Why not use the PICC for the blood draw?