Children’s head movements and postural stability as a function of task
Autor: | Faisal Mushtaq, Kate Jarrett-Peet, Mark Mon-Williams, Raymond Holt, Ian Flatters, Richard M. Wilkie, Anna Rossiter, Liam J. B. Hill, Peter Culmer |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Male
Aging medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent media_common.quotation_subject Posture Developmental psychology Task (project management) Young Adult Child Development Physical medicine and rehabilitation Handwriting medicine Postural Balance Humans Child Function (engineering) Motor skill media_common Analysis of Variance General Neuroscience Motor control Hand Gaze Biomechanical Phenomena Child Preschool Head Movements Eye tracking Female Psychology Photic Stimulation Psychomotor Performance |
Zdroj: | Experimental Brain Research. 232:1953-1970 |
ISSN: | 1432-1106 0014-4819 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00221-014-3886-0 |
Popis: | Manual dexterity and postural control develop throughout childhood, leading to changes in the synergistic relationships between head, hand and posture. But the postural developments that support complex manual task performance (i.e. beyond pointing and grasping) have not been examined in depth. We report two experiments in which we recorded head and posture data whilst participants simultaneously performed a visuomotor task. In Experiment 1, we explored the extent to which postural stability is affected by concurrently performing a visual and manual task whilst standing (a visual vs. manual-tracking task) in four age groups: 5-6 years (n = 8), 8-9 years (n = 10), 10-11 years (n = 7) and 19-21 years (n = 9). For visual tracking, the children's but not adult's postural movement increased relative to baseline with a larger effect for faster moving targets. In manual tracking, we found greater postural movement in children compared to adults. These data suggest predictive postural compensation mechanisms develop during childhood to improve stability whilst performing visuomotor tasks. Experiment 2 examined the extent to which posture is influenced by manual activity in three age groups of children [5-6 years (n = 14), 7-8 years (n = 25), and 9-10 years (n = 24)] when they were seated, given that many important tasks (e.g. handwriting) are learned and performed whilst seated. We found that postural stability varied in a principled manner as a function of task demands. Children exhibited increased stability when tracing a complex shape (which required less predictive postural adjustment) and decreased stability in an aiming task (which required movements that were more likely to perturb posture). These experiments shed light on the task-dependant relationships that exist between postural control mechanisms and the development of specific types of manual control. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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