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Occupational Therapy

Horizontales
The ability of the brain to change or to be changed as a result of activity, especially as one responds to sensations.
A horizontal position of the body where the face is positioned downward.
Up and down or to and fro linear movement, such as swinging, bouncing, and jumping.
A horizontal body position where the face is positioned upward.
The conscious awareness of joint position and body movement in space, such as knowing where to place one's feet when climbing stairs, without visual cues.
The brain's ability to regulate its own activity.
All muscle groups surrounding a joint contracting and "working" together to provide that joint stability resulting in the ability to maintain a position.
The process of establishing preference of one side of the brain for directing skilled motor function on the opposite side of the body, while the opposite side is used for stabilization.
Oversensitivity to sensory stimuli, characterized by a tendency to be either fearful and cautious, or negative and defiant.
The neurological process of tuning out familiar sensations.
Pertaining to the brain-behavior of taking in sensory messages and reacting with a physical response.
The combination of many parts into a unified, harmonious whole.
Refers to our sense of movement and the pull of gravity, related to our body.
The ability to interact successfully with the physical environment; to plan, organize, and carry out a sequence of unfamiliar actions.
A bending action of a joint or a pulling in of a body part.
Aiming one's eye at an object or shifting one's gaze from one object to another.
Verticales
The unconscious awareness of sensations coming from joints, muscles, tendons, and ligaments.
The meaning the brain attributes to sensory input.
Following a moving object or a line of print with the eyes.
Forming a single visual image from two images that the eyes separately recorded.
A term used to mean balance.
The awareness of right/left, forward/back, and up/down, and the ability to move oneself in those directions.
Deficient motor planning that is often related to a decrease in sensory processing.
A straightening action of a joint.
Accommodating one's vision smoothly between near and distant objects.
Refers to the sense of touch and various qualities attributed to touch.