Examples of posture in the following topics:
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- The prerequisite to all these skills is postural control—the ability to hold one's head up, sit independently, and stand.
- Appropriate posture allows the child to learn to walk, run, and engage in other gross motor skills.
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- They may exhibit waxy flexibility, where another person can move the patient's limbs into postures and the patient will retain these postures, like a wax doll.
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- However, it is also responsible for balance and posture, and it assists us when we are learning a new motor skill, such as playing a sport or musical instrument.
- to enable sensorimotor functions to control posture and other fundamental movements.
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- Other signals are sent to the muscles that control posture and keep us upright.
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- For example, individuals with schizophrenia can demonstrate manic patterns of repetitious movement with no purpose, compulsively mimic the sounds or movements of others, or maintain the same posture for a long period of time without moving.
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- Therapists help individuals to challenge maladaptive thinking and help them replace it with more realistic and effective thoughts, or encourage them to take a more open, mindful, and aware posture toward those thoughts.