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Multi-limb coordination and rhythmic variability under varying sensory availability conditions in children with DCD

Multi-limb coordination and rhythmic variability under varying sensory availability conditions in children with DCD
Multi-limb coordination and rhythmic variability under varying sensory availability conditions in children with DCD
Children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) have sensory processing deficits; how do these influence the interface between sensory input and motor performance? Previously, we found that children with DCD were less able to organize and maintain a gross motor coordination task in time to an auditory cue, particularly at higher frequencies [Whitall, J., Getchell, N., McMenamin, S., Horn, C., Wilms-Floet, A., & Clark, J. (2006). Perception–action coupling in children with and without DCD: Frequency locking between task relevant auditory signals and motor responses in a dual motor task. Child: Care, Health, and Development, 32, 679–692]. In the present study, we examine the same task (clapping in-phase to marching on a platform) under conditions involving the removal of vision and hearing. Eleven children with DCD (mean = 7.21, SD = 0.52 years), 7 typically developing (TD) children (mean = 6.95 ± 0.72 years), and 10 adults performed continuous clapping while marching under four conditions: with vision and hearing, without vision, without hearing, and without both. Results showed no significant condition effects for any measure taken. The DCD group was more variable in phasing their claps and footfalls than both the adult group and the TD group. There were also significant group effects for inter-clap interval coefficient of variation and inter-footfall interval coefficient of variation, with the DCD group being the most variable for both measures. Coherence analysis between limb combinations (e.g., left arm–right arm, right arm–left leg) revealed that the adults exhibited significantly greater coherence for each combination than both of the children’s groups. The TD group showed significantly greater coherence than the DCD group for every limb combination except foot–foot and left hand–right foot. Measures of approximate entropy indicated that adults differed from children both with and without DCD in the structure of the variability across a trial with adults showing more complexity. Children with DCD are able to accomplish a self-initiated gross-motor coordination task but with increased variability for most but not all measures compared to typically developing children. The availability of visual and/or auditory information does not play a significant role in stabilizing temporal coordination of this task, suggesting that these are not salient sources of information for this particular task
0167-9457
256-269
Mackenzie, Sam J.
c83c7d9d-6a25-4bed-b1dc-a3d576931114
Getchell, Nancy
ad8930a7-1a17-4c02-941a-cbe52984277f
Deutsch, Katherine
01915ac1-4629-4a4a-b985-2ce691854b1e
Wilms-Floet, Annemiek
fa0c6678-67af-46be-b7c9-ed8e85fcfe28
Clark, Jane E.
d5c0297c-431e-4880-b61c-b87d7611f3cb
Whitall, Jill
9761aefb-be80-4270-bc1f-0e726399376e
Mackenzie, Sam J.
c83c7d9d-6a25-4bed-b1dc-a3d576931114
Getchell, Nancy
ad8930a7-1a17-4c02-941a-cbe52984277f
Deutsch, Katherine
01915ac1-4629-4a4a-b985-2ce691854b1e
Wilms-Floet, Annemiek
fa0c6678-67af-46be-b7c9-ed8e85fcfe28
Clark, Jane E.
d5c0297c-431e-4880-b61c-b87d7611f3cb
Whitall, Jill
9761aefb-be80-4270-bc1f-0e726399376e

Mackenzie, Sam J., Getchell, Nancy, Deutsch, Katherine, Wilms-Floet, Annemiek, Clark, Jane E. and Whitall, Jill (2008) Multi-limb coordination and rhythmic variability under varying sensory availability conditions in children with DCD. Human Movement Science, 27 (2), 256-269. (doi:10.1016/j.humov.2008.02.010).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) have sensory processing deficits; how do these influence the interface between sensory input and motor performance? Previously, we found that children with DCD were less able to organize and maintain a gross motor coordination task in time to an auditory cue, particularly at higher frequencies [Whitall, J., Getchell, N., McMenamin, S., Horn, C., Wilms-Floet, A., & Clark, J. (2006). Perception–action coupling in children with and without DCD: Frequency locking between task relevant auditory signals and motor responses in a dual motor task. Child: Care, Health, and Development, 32, 679–692]. In the present study, we examine the same task (clapping in-phase to marching on a platform) under conditions involving the removal of vision and hearing. Eleven children with DCD (mean = 7.21, SD = 0.52 years), 7 typically developing (TD) children (mean = 6.95 ± 0.72 years), and 10 adults performed continuous clapping while marching under four conditions: with vision and hearing, without vision, without hearing, and without both. Results showed no significant condition effects for any measure taken. The DCD group was more variable in phasing their claps and footfalls than both the adult group and the TD group. There were also significant group effects for inter-clap interval coefficient of variation and inter-footfall interval coefficient of variation, with the DCD group being the most variable for both measures. Coherence analysis between limb combinations (e.g., left arm–right arm, right arm–left leg) revealed that the adults exhibited significantly greater coherence for each combination than both of the children’s groups. The TD group showed significantly greater coherence than the DCD group for every limb combination except foot–foot and left hand–right foot. Measures of approximate entropy indicated that adults differed from children both with and without DCD in the structure of the variability across a trial with adults showing more complexity. Children with DCD are able to accomplish a self-initiated gross-motor coordination task but with increased variability for most but not all measures compared to typically developing children. The availability of visual and/or auditory information does not play a significant role in stabilizing temporal coordination of this task, suggesting that these are not salient sources of information for this particular task

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Published date: 2008
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 361418
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/361418
ISSN: 0167-9457
PURE UUID: 66d4b655-8a65-49e2-8ca7-164797b1042e

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Date deposited: 20 Jan 2014 13:01
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 15:50

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Contributors

Author: Sam J. Mackenzie
Author: Nancy Getchell
Author: Katherine Deutsch
Author: Annemiek Wilms-Floet
Author: Jane E. Clark
Author: Jill Whitall

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