frontal plane
(noun)
divides a body into dorsal (back) and ventral (front) parts
Examples of frontal plane in the following topics:
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Animal Body Planes and Cavities
- A sagittal plane divides the body into right and left portions.
- A frontal plane (also called a coronal plane) separates the front (ventral) from the back (dorsal).
- A transverse plane (or, horizontal plane) divides the animal into upper and lower portions.
- Shown are the planes of a quadruped goat and a bipedal human.
- The frontal plane divides the front and back, while the transverse plane divides the body into upper and lower portions.
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Brain: Cerebral Cortex and Brain Lobes
- The cerebral cortex of the brain is divided into four lobes responsible for distinct functions: frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital.
- The frontal lobe is located at the front of the brain, over the eyes.
- The frontal lobe also contains the motor cortex, which is important for planning and implementing movement.
- Neurons in the frontal lobe also control cognitive functions such as maintaining attention, speech, and decision-making.
- The human cerebral cortex includes the frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital lobes, each of which is involved in a different higher function.
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Balance and Determining Equilibrium
- One is oriented in the horizontal plane, whereas the other two are oriented in the vertical plane.
- The anterior and posterior vertical canals are oriented at approximately 45 degrees relative to the sagittal plane .
- As the head rotates in a plane parallel to the semicircular canal, the fluid lags, deflecting the cupula in the direction opposite to the head movement.
- The movement of two canals within a plane results in information about the direction in which the head is moving, and activation of all six canals can give a very precise indication of head movement in three dimensions.
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Human Axial Skeleton
- The eight cranial bones include the frontal bone, two parietal bones, two temporal bones, the occipital bone, the sphenoid bone, and the ethmoid bone.
- The cranial bones, including the frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital, ethmoid, and sphenoid bones.
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Body Plans
- Radial symmetry describes an animal with an up-and-down orientation: any plane cut along its longitudinal axis through the organism produces equal halves, but not a definite right or left side.
- The goat also has an upper and lower component to it, but a plane cut from front to back separates the animal into definite right and left sides.
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Animal Characterization Based on Body Symmetry
- Bilateral symmetry involves the division of the animal through a sagittal plane, resulting in two mirror-image, right and left halves, such as those of a butterfly, crab, or human body .
- This monarch butterfly demonstrates bilateral symmetry down the sagittal plane, with the line of symmetry running from ventral to dorsal and dividing the body into two left and right halves.
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Movement at Synovial Joints
- Protraction is the anterior movement of a bone in the horizontal plane.
- (a)–(b) Flexion and extension motions are in the sagittal (anterior–posterior) plane of motion.
- (e) Abduction and adduction are motions of the limbs, hand, fingers, or toes in the coronal (medial–lateral) plane of movement.
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The Nervous System
- In mammals, these include the cortex (which can be broken down into four primary functional lobes: frontal, temporal, occipital, and parietal), basal ganglia, thalamus, hypothalamus, limbic system, cerebellum, and brainstem; although structures in some of these designations overlap.
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Leaf Structure and Arrangment
- Alternate leaves alternate on each side of the stem in a flat plane, and spiral leaves are arranged in a spiral along the stem.
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Lipid Molecules
- If hydrogens are present in the same plane, it is referred to as a cis fat; if the hydrogen atoms are on two different planes, it is referred to as a trans fat.