A bad guy if you are talking about human characters in a story. But if you are talking about muscles, it is the one that acts to oppose the action of the prime mover, or agonist. For example: The biceps and triceps have an agonsit/antagonist relationship. When you flex your elbow (pretend you are Arnold Schwarzenegger and you want to 'bulge you biceps'). When you do that your triceps relaxes to allow the biceps to contract. But, in actuality, both are contracting, only the biceps are getting shorter and the triceps are getting longer. In other words, if you did not have the triceps to control and mitigate the movement of the biceps, you'd end up punching yourself in the face because there was no way to control the biceps shortening and flexing the elbow until you KO'd yourself.
In other words, the agonist, or prime mover is the gas pedal and the antagonist is like the brakes. You need them both to control movement in the body.
An antagonist muscle reverses the action of a prime mover. When the prime mover contracts to produce a movement, the antagonist muscle relaxes to allow that movement to occur in the opposite direction. This coordination between prime movers and antagonists is essential for controlled and coordinated movement.
the agonist of the muscle is a motion that contracts the body to move in its opposition the antagonist is the muscle that causes movement of the posterior and anterior terms of the human body.
The antagonist to the platysma are the masseter and temporalis...
The masseter acts as the antagonist.
The agonist-antagonist function refers to the coordinated action of muscles that work together to create movement in a joint. When this function is well-developed, it helps maintain proper alignment and balance in the body. This is crucial for optimal movement efficiency, injury prevention, and overall physical performance. Regular strength training and functional movement exercises can help improve the development of the agonist-antagonist function.
antagonist muscle
Pheniramine is a histamine drug which have anticholinergic action but its effect is agonistic or antagonist or partialagonist. Pheniramine is a histamine drug which have anticholinergic action but its effect is agonistic or antagonist or partialagonist.
A antagonist muscle is a muscle that opposes the action of another muscle. The Triceps Brachii is the antagonist of the Biceps Brachii.
protagonist agonist I know because I'm in agony right now.
antagonist
In literature, an antagonist is a character, group of characters, or an institution which opposes the protagonist, the main character(s). The antagonist struggles against, opposes, or competes with the protagonist. In biochemistry, the antagonist is a substance that interferes with or inhibits the physiological action of another. In anatomy, the antagonist is a muscle whose action counteracts that of another specified muscle. In pharmacology, the antagonist is a drug that counteracts the effects of another drug.
In literature, an antagonist is a character, group of characters, or an institution which opposes the protagonist, the main character(s). The antagonist struggles against, opposes, or competes with the protagonist. In biochemistry, the antagonist is a substance that interferes with or inhibits the physiological action of another. In anatomy, the antagonist is a muscle whose action counteracts that of another specified muscle. In pharmacology, the antagonist is a drug that counteracts the effects of another drug.
A antagonist muscle is a muscle that opposes the action of another muscle. The Triceps Brachii is the antagonist of the Biceps Brachii.
antagonist
yes
antagonist
because he was the antagonist