He's a natural at a Jasper Johns — ian hermeticism, physical sensuality, with a keen sense
of bilateral symmetry, process, scale, and systematic art - making.
Perhaps the most significant and still contentious finding from the Doushantuo fossils is evidence
of bilateral symmetry, a key characteristic in many modern animals.
Not exact matches
Although the bodies
of these animals have a distinct top and bottom, they do not have distinguishable left and right sides — an arrangement, present in humans and other higher life forms, known as
bilateral symmetry.
Edler cited research supporting the claim that
bilateral symmetry is an important indicator
of freedom from disease, and worthiness for mating.
And a very ancient origin
of symmetry makes sense: Because all but the most primitive animals are
bilateral at some stage in their life, Bottjer says, «this basic feature must have been an early evolutionary innovation.»
For animals that lack this
bilateral symmetry — sponges, stinging jellyfish, anemones — the digestive system is more like a cul - de-sac, a fitting turn
of phrase for what is essentially a bag into which food flows, gets digested and then must be expelled before more can be consumed.
Because they don't have any obvious
bilateral symmetry — unlike most animals — the two Dendrogramma species must sit on one
of the lowest branches in the animal evolutionary tree, occupied by the few animals that lack this
symmetry.
bilaterians: A clade
of animals whode members share:
bilateral symmetry, are triploblastic (three tissue layers: ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm), and with HOX genes in one or more clusters with the genes within a cluster arranged in the same order as the body parts they affect.
The pattern has the
bilateral symmetry of a person — or a mirror image, which surely lies at its origins, probably via computer.
Some
of Joan Jonas» most recognizable and recent works on paper feature images
of animals (winged bugs, fishes, the nude human) with obvious
bilateral lines
of symmetry drawn in wet media, often times ink.
Previous research has shown that the type
of man a woman prefers tends to change across her ovulatory cycle, as she becomes more attracted to masculine faces and bodies, and
bilateral symmetry, when she's fertile.
In addition, it is merely a measure self - perceived mate value as opposed to a more objective measure like
bilateral symmetry of the face, level
of education, or height.
The front exterior
of «The House
of Symmetry» retains its
bilateral balance, but the facade has been sharpened up dramatically with the new French doors and outdoor lighting.