No.
Voluntary muscles are what you have control over. Like your skeletal muscle are usually voluntary. Involuntary muscles are what you have no control of. Like your smooth and cardiac muscles you have no control of. The difference between voluntary and involuntary muscles are voluntary muscles you have control of and involuntary you have no control of. Hope this answered your question.
Voluntary muscles are skeletal muscles (under somatic control) and involuntary muscles involve the heart, smooth muscles and anything under autonomic control.
No, the ciliary muscles are not considered voluntary skeletal muscles. They are involuntary smooth muscles that control the shape of the lens in the eye.
yes it is.....
they are called caultonary muscles. YOU want to use them
Smooth muscles are involuntary, as are cardiac muscles. Only skeletal muscles are voluntary.
Muscles that are under your conscious control are voluntary, such as flexing your elbow. The ones under unconscious control are either reflexive or involuntary, such as the muscles that move your food through your digestive system, or make your heart beat.
You can flex skeletal muscles voluntary. These are the muscles you can control and move consciously. Smooth muscles and cardiac muscles, which work involuntarily, cannot be consciously flexed.
Arms, legs, hands, feet, face... Anywhere where you can voluntarily move. And involuntary muscle is one that is moved automatically and unconsciously (i.e. you don't have to think about moving them) by a part of the brain, like your heart or digestive system. Your lungs are an example of both: they breath automatically, but you can also control them.
voluntary muscles....mostly skeletal mauscles
Both cardiac and smooth muscles are involuntary. The only voluntary muscle type is skeletal muscle.
Skeletal muscles are under voluntary control; smooth muscles and cardiac muscles aren't.