Motor ability in infants -- Handbooks, manuals, etc. : Helping babies help themselves : from in your arms to standing alone / Vickie Meade, PT, DSc, MPH, PCS, Janette Heath Osborne, DipPhys, APA ; drawings by Christina Frank
Motor ability in youth -- Czech Republic : Životní styl české mládeže : pohybová aktivita, standardy a normy motorické výkonosti / Antonín Rychtecký, Pavel Tilinger
Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994 Queensland : Pre-court personal injuries procedure in Queensland : Personal Injuries Proceedings Act 2002 (QLD) ; Workers' Compensation and Rehabilitation ACT 2003 (QLD) ; Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994 (QLD) / Ashley G. Jones
An aphasia characterized by impairment of expressive LANGUAGE (speech, writing, signs) and relative preservation of receptive language abilities (i.e., comprehension). This condition is caused by lesions of the motor association cortex in the FRONTAL LOBE (BROCA AREA and adjacent cortical and white matter regions)
A group of cognitive disorders characterized by the inability to perform previously learned skills that cannot be attributed to deficits of motor or sensory function. The two major subtypes of this condition are ideomotor (see APRAXIA, IDEOMOTOR) and ideational apraxia, which refers to loss of the ability to mentally formulate the processes involved with performing an action. For example, dressing apraxia may result from an inability to mentally formulate the act of placing clothes on the body. Apraxias are generally associated with lesions of the dominant PARIETAL LOBE and supramarginal gyrus. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp56-7)