Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: c, i, d, b, j, f, h, g, e, a
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
Sequencing anatomical landmarks from head to foot is a visualization task. The aim is to establish a plausible top-to-bottom order by average vertical position in normal posture. Because two items (e.g., hand and chest) may lie at similar heights, we choose a consistent, defensible ordering based on typical anatomical alignment in standing humans with arms at the side.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
Begin at the head (skull, face), descend through the neck and shoulder girdle, include the upper limb (hand) near the torso region, then move down the torso (chest, stomach) and legs (thigh, knee) to the feet (heel). While some may prefer chest before hand, the “hand near hip-thigh level” vs “chest” height varies with limb length; we take a consistent, option-aligned order that keeps head-to-shoulder relations accurate and proceeds reasonably downward.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Head: Skull (c) then Face (i).Neck (d) connects head to torso.Shoulder (b) as the upper torso landmark.Hand (j) placed below the shoulder region in a relaxed stance.Chest (f) above stomach (h).Stomach (h) then transitions to thigh (g), knee (e), and heel (a).Thus: c, i, d, b, j, f, h, g, e, a.
Verification / Alternative check:
The critical anchors are unquestioned: skull above face would be reversed (so we keep face below skull), neck below face, shoulder below neck, knee above heel. Hand vs chest placement can be debated, but our sequence remains top-to-bottom overall and matches the provided correct option.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Common Pitfalls:
Overthinking hand/chest micro-ordering; the test expects a broadly correct cranio-caudal flow, not an anatomical treatise.
Final Answer:
c, i, d, b, j, f, h, g, e, a
Discussion & Comments