Physics, asked by manikant08032003, 10 months ago

A havey body breaks in the equals parts
tuo of them more with speed com's one is
due north and another due east then, find the
speed of third part and its direction​

Answers

Answered by itzJitesh
0

Answer:

Your child may get a number of therapies to help with her sensory processing issues. But specialists who work with her may recommend one you may not have heard of. It’s called heavy work activities. Occupational therapists commonly use heavy work to help kids who seek or avoid certain kinds of sensory input.

Here’s what you need to know about heavy work activities and how they can help.

Proprioception and Heavy Work

We typically think of people as having five senses: sight, smell, hearing, taste and touch. But there are two other senses that can affect motor skills. One is called the vestibular sense, and it controls balance and movement. The other is called the proprioceptive sense, and it controls body awareness.

A child’s sense of body awareness and balance comes from the way receptors in her muscles and joints send messages to her brain. They tell her where her body is in space, where each body part is and what it’s doing. It’s the way she knows how much force to use to complete a task, like writing on paper or shutting a door.

This system doesn’t always work as effectively in kids with sensory processing issues. A child may write too lightly with her pencil or slam the car door really hard. She may think she’s pushing down hard enough with the pencil or that she’s using less force to shut the door than she actually is.

When kids struggle with this, proprioceptive input helps them know where their body is and what it should be doing. That input is also known as heavy work.

Explanation:

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