Daily Anatomy Flashcards 12+

Quizzes to Learn Human Anatomy

Kenhub

Designed for iPad

    • 4.8 • 2.3K Ratings
    • Free

Screenshots

Description

New topics, more content! Daily Anatomy Flashcards teaches healthcare students the 500 most important anatomical structures in a beginner-friendly format. The perfect entry into the world of anatomy!

*Reach your goals*

Starting to learn anatomy can be overwhelming, but it shouldn't be. Daily Anatomy can be used without any prior knowledge. It starts with the basics, and challenges your brain more and more over time. Learning with Daily Anatomy is not only about repetition. It introduces information in varying forms. Solving a problem in different ways helps you memorize information longer-term and finally be able to fully absorb it. Whether on your next exam, or in your medical professional career, all the anatomy structures will be at hand. No more thinking. Just knowing.

*What will you learn?*

With Daily Anatomy you learn all the important structures of human anatomy. This includes bones, muscles, nerves, vessels and specific points on the bones.

Instead of many thin arrows pointing at various structures, each structure is clearly highlighted in green in its entirety. This way you can easily identify and memorize both shape and location.

*How to stay motivated and not forget*

Whether you need to learn lists of information, or for instance, every muscle and bone in the human body including how they function together, there is a method really works to help you out. The bonus is that this method doesn't stress you out either because you get to take lots of breaks.

It's called spaced repetition, and it's the way to go for knowledge that sticks in your cranium.

By using spaced repetition, you work through a series of increasing intervals of time between studying what you've previously learned. This method utilizes the psychological spacing effect, which occurs when you are going back over information that you have already learned in order to remember it better. Spaced repetition works well for lists of items or new vocabularies such as medical terminology.

Daily Anatomy has built-in spaced repetition, so you learn as efficiently and effectively as you can.

What’s New

Version 2.0.2

- Bug Fixes

Ratings and Reviews

4.8 out of 5
2.3K Ratings

2.3K Ratings

Efi_Moss ,

Good job, guys!

Just purchased your amazing pro-plan for the website, and gladly found this app on the way. This app actually practices what everyone else only preaches for: quick, time-dependent repeating cycles of memorizations, which build up slowly. Anytime I have 2 min for myself I would pop my phone out and play.
My humble suggestion would be to work on the algorithm, as it appears to be fixed on the same terms (for dozens of trials with no change) unless I leave and re-enter the app and then it would start adding more terms to learn (I am sure it will get better with updates). Also, please release more packages. Good job guys!

leftsss ,

Not my first choice anatomy app

For a free app, Kenhub did a great job. The app is fluid and fast and functions well. iPhone X support is lacking, and there are only muscles and bones for the upper and lower limb available as of now. It seems it has been this way for a while as there has been no recent update to the app. I’d gladly pay a nominal fee to have the content improved on, as innervations and actions of the muscles are more clinically relevant and testable than memorizing where they are located in Kenhub’s gorgeous illustrations. When getting an answer correct, there is no ability to pause and reflect on the answer choice, thus if you made a guess the app assumes you knew the answer, do not need to review it and moves on. Keeping the image up after answering correctly could help us reinforce the correct answer choice.

Being produced by Kenhub, this app has a lot of potential and I wish I would’ve been able to utilize it for more before my upcoming MSK exam.

Mouath the one ,

Almost perfect

The app is simple and The illustration are gorgeous. The problem is that Every term is tested by one illustration, that is okay but the thing is with time i can predict the term just by having a quick look at the illustration and not by looking at the structure. An example is the term “internal” and “external” once i see an ear i choose one of those terms. My suggestion is that you should make multiple illustration for each term to make it little challenging and to make sure that the user isn't memorizing structures not illustration. At least every illustration should be rotated or viewed from a different angle when the illustration appears for second time. I hope you understand my point, and I apologize for my bad english.

App Privacy

The developer, Kenhub, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

Data Not Linked to You

The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:

  • Diagnostics

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

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