Sentences with phrase «big brains in their heads»

Not exact matches

for a big head he has, he has a peanut for a brain, so don't even dare to think that he could ever turn into a edgar davids in the future
After reading David Epstein's essay about Junior Seau and brain trauma (SCORECARD), I was left wondering if players and coaches are paying attention to the growing research that suggests that the combination of big - impact hits and constant smaller hits to the head play a major part in the trauma to a player's brain?
Now I believe the headaches, insomnia, and fatigue were all related to that big hit injuring his brain and other hits in hockey continuing to injure his head.
In other words, because humans have relatively big brains, their infants must be born early in development while their heads are still small enough to insure a safe deliverIn other words, because humans have relatively big brains, their infants must be born early in development while their heads are still small enough to insure a safe deliverin development while their heads are still small enough to insure a safe delivery.
Read previous Zoologger columns: The butterfly that sleeps its way to safety, How to get elected in a termite democracy, Away in a vermin - infested manger, Child clones shape - shift to escape hunters Weaponised eggs turn predators» stomachs, The hardest bat in the world, Houdini fly inflates head to break walls, A primate with eyes bigger than its brains, The solar - powered electric hornet, The miniature cuckold fish, Lemmings swap suicide for infanticide.
With eyes twice as big as their brains, a head that can rotate 180 degrees in each direction and the ability to track prey using ultrasound, the tiny animals are formidable nocturnal hunters.
So when you think about our pride in our brains, you know, in our big brains and then here is a case where, well actually that's an accident and you know, wasn't the increasing size of the brain that gave the pressure that women with larger pelvises that could accommodate bigger heads survived.
The comments come from current Teachers, Teaching Assistants, SEND co-ordinators, heads of house, inclusion managers and Form Group Tutors...: We used this in small groups in our new class every morning for a week, what a great start, everyone is still buzzing... Builds a strong sense of belonging to something special... your class... Encourages differences and similarities to recognised and valued... Hugely improves our efforts at inclusion... The students quickly came out of their shells and are blossoming... Reveals much of the nature of the students... Gets us buzzing as a group... Encourages participants to take part in their own game and go and find things out from others... brilliant ice breaker game... Helped to resolve a huge problem we had in getting students to gel... Switches the students brains on from the moment go... Helps to break down various barriers... Gives a big boost to developing important life skills... This gives a great insight and a fantastic array of examples, clues and hints as to the characters of each individual in the group... Helps participants learn some things about themselves... Helps participants learn some things about others... Helps you learn about the participants (you can be a player as well on some occasions)... Makes it easy to develop class rules of fairness and cooperation... Builds a sense of purpose... Creates a sense of community and togetherness... Brilliant, just brilliant... our school is buzzing...
Angie had a couple of serious fractures for which surgery had been required, she lost a spleen, there was a collapsed lung and she had a titanium rod in a femur, but the big issue was the head injury — there had been an impressive laceration on the back of her head and while there was no open fracture, her brain began to swell and the neurosurgeon implanted a shunt to drain the edema.
Read on in Generation Rx for: — exclusive interviews with the strategists, scientists, and current and former heads of GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, Merck, Roche, and more — a first - ever, inside look at the rollicking business story behind pharma's rise to power — the dramatic effects our drug culture is having on our major organs, from the liver to the heart to the brain — why old bodies and young bodies are the biggest, and riskiest, arenas for our great American prescription pill party — how the largely uncharted terrain of polypharmacy (various drugs taken together) has unleashed unanticipated, often deadly, consequences on unwitting patients Generation Rx will make every American who has ever taken a prescription drug look anew at what's in our medicine cabinets, and why.
Right now though I have my fingers crossed for the weather for the weekend, our big boy has just headed off on his Silver DoE 3day hike and my nephew (who has brain ca) is doing a Walk4BrainCancer in Bowral on Sunday.
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