809 resultados para Specific motor skills


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A set of constraints on the performance of motor skills is a determinant factor of success in many sport modalities that require from the athlete continuous adaptation to changes in the game context. Taking into account Newell's model of organism (or performer), task and environmental constraints in the acquisition of motor skills (NEWELL, 1986), the focus of this study is the set of changes that take place in motor behavior from the beginner to the high level athlete. In specific, the focus is toward changes in sports settings in which the ball is the center of the game, responsible for the relationship among athletes of the same team as well as between opponents, as in volleyball. The ball, in its trajectory, carries on a set of constraints to the player's behavior. To be able of imposing constraints on the opponent's behavior is so important as to know how to deal with a ball sent to you by the opponent in an unpredictable trajectory.

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Both theoretically and empirically there is a continuous interest in understanding the specific relation between cognitive and motor development in childhood. In the present longitudinal study including three measurement points, this relation was targeted. At the beginning of the study, the participating children were 5-6-year-olds. By assessing participants' fine motor skills, their executive functioning, and their non-verbal intelligence, their cross-sectional and cross-lagged interrelations were examined. Additionally, performance in these three areas was used to predict early school achievement (in terms of mathematics, reading, and spelling) at the end of participants' first grade. Correlational analyses and structural equation modeling revealed that fine motor skills, non-verbal intelligence and executive functioning were significantly interrelated. Both fine motor skills and intelligence had significant links to later school achievement. However, when executive functioning was additionally included into the prediction of early academic achievement, fine motor skills and non-verbal intelligence were no longer significantly associated with later school performance suggesting that executive functioning plays an important role for the motor-cognitive performance link.

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Behavioral and neurophysiological studies suggest that skill learning can be mediated by discrete, experience-driven changes within specific neural representations subserving the performance of the trained task. We have shown that a few minutes of daily practice on a sequential finger opposition task induced large, incremental performance gains over a few weeks of training. These gains did not generalize to the contralateral hand nor to a matched sequence of identical component movements, suggesting that a lateralized representation of the learned sequence of movements evolved through practice. This interpretation was supported by functional MRI data showing that a more extensive representation of the trained sequence emerged in primary motor cortex after 3 weeks of training. The imaging data, however, also indicated important changes occurring in primary motor cortex during the initial scanning sessions, which we proposed may reflect the setting up of a task-specific motor processing routine. Here we provide behavioral and functional MRI data on experience-dependent changes induced by a limited amount of repetitions within the first imaging session. We show that this limited training experience can be sufficient to trigger performance gains that require time to become evident. We propose that skilled motor performance is acquired in several stages: “fast” learning, an initial, within-session improvement phase, followed by a period of consolidation of several hours duration, and then “slow” learning, consisting of delayed, incremental gains in performance emerging after continued practice. This time course may reflect basic mechanisms of neuronal plasticity in the adult brain that subserve the acquisition and retention of many different skills.

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The ability to quickly detect and respond to visual stimuli in the environment is critical to many human activities. While such perceptual and visual-motor skills are important in a myriad of contexts, considerable variability exists between individuals in these abilities. To better understand the sources of this variability, we assessed perceptual and visual-motor skills in a large sample of 230 healthy individuals via the Nike SPARQ Sensory Station, and compared variability in their behavioral performance to demographic, state, sleep and consumption characteristics. Dimension reduction and regression analyses indicated three underlying factors: Visual-Motor Control, Visual Sensitivity, and Eye Quickness, which accounted for roughly half of the overall population variance in performance on this battery. Inter-individual variability in Visual-Motor Control was correlated with gender and circadian patters such that performance on this factor was better for males and for those who had been awake for a longer period of time before assessment. The current findings indicate that abilities involving coordinated hand movements in response to stimuli are subject to greater individual variability, while visual sensitivity and occulomotor control are largely stable across individuals.

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One can partially eliminate motor skills acquired through practice in the hours immediately following practice by applying repetitive transcranial stimulation (rTMS) over the primary motor cortex. The disruption of acquired levels of performance has been demonstrated on tasks that are ballistic in nature. The authors investigated whether motor recall on a discrete aiming task is degraded following a disruption of the primary motor cortex induced via rTMS. Participants (N = 16) maintained acquired performance levels and patterns of muscle activity following the application of rTMS. despite a reduction in corticospinal excitability. Disruption of the primary motor cortex during a consolidation period did not influence the retention of acquired skill in this type of discrete visuomotor task.

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Objectives
To evaluate how involvement in life situations (participation) in children with cerebral palsy varies with type and severity of impairment and to investigate geographical variation in participation.

Design
Cross sectional study. Trained interviewers visited parents of children with cerebral palsy; multilevel multivariable regression related participation to impairments, pain, and sociodemographic characteristics.

Setting
Eight European regions with population registers of children with cerebral palsy; one further region recruited children from multiple sources.

Participants
1174 children aged 8-12 with cerebral palsy randomly selected from the population registers, 743 (63%) joined in the study; the further region recruited 75 children.

Main outcome measure
Children’s participation assessed by the Life-H questionnaire covering 10 main areas of daily life. Scoring ignored adaptations or assistance required for participation.

Results
Children with pain and those with more severely impaired walking, fine motor skills, communication, and intellectual abilities had lower participation across most domains. Type of cerebral palsy and problems with feeding and vision were associated with lower participation for specific domains, but the sociodemographic factors examined were not. Impairment and pain accounted for up to a sixth of the variation in participation. Participation on all domains varied substantially between regions: children in east Denmark had consistently higher participation than children in other regions. For most participation domains, about a third of the unexplained variation could be ascribed to variation between regions and about two thirds to variation between individuals.

Conclusions
Participation in children with cerebral palsy should be assessed in clinical practice to guide intervention and assess its effect. Pain should be carefully assessed. Some European countries facilitate participation better than others, implying some countries could make better provision. Legislation and regulation should be directed to ensuring this happens.

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AIM:
We examined the effect of partial hearing, including cochlear implantation, on the development of motor skills in children (aged 6-12y).

METHOD:
Three independent groups of children were selected: a partial hearing group (n=25 [14 males, 11 females]; mean age 8y 8mo, SD 1y 10mo), a nonverbal IQ-matched group (n=27 [15 males, 12 females]; mean age 9y, SD 1y 6mo), and an age-matched group (n=26 [8 males, 18 females]; mean age 8y 8mo, SD 1y 7mo) from three schools with special units for children with partial hearing. All children with partial hearing had a bilateral hearing loss >60 decibels. Motor and balance skills were assessed using the Movement Assessment Battery for Children (MABC) and two protocols from the NeuroCom Balance Master clinical procedures.

RESULTS:
The mean standardized total MABC score of the children with partial hearing (95% confidence interval [CI] 71.8-88.7) was significantly lower than both the age-matched (95% CI 95.8-111.4; p<0.01) and the IQ-matched (95% CI 87.6-103.0; p=0.03) comparison groups. The children with partial hearing had particular difficulties with balance, most notably during tests of intersensory demand. However, subgroup analyses revealed that the effect of cochlear implantation was clearly dependent on the nature of the task.

INTERPRETATION:
Children with partial hearing are at high risk of clinical levels of motor deficit, with balance difficulties providing support for conventional vestibular deficit theory. However, the effect of cochlear implantation suggests that other sensory systems may be involved. A broader ecological perspective, which takes into account factors external to the child, may prove a useful framework for future research.

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Objetivos: Pretende-se verificar as modificações neuromotoras após uma intervenção baseada no conceito de Bobath ao nível dos ajustes posturais durante o alcance funcional dos membros superiores, em três crianças com paralisia cerebral. Pretende-se também, verificar o efeito desta abordagem nas atividades e participação, bem como destacar os aspetos individuais das mesmas crianças com a capacidade de mudança após a intervenção. Metodologia: A avaliação foi realizada antes e três meses após a intervenção em fisioterapia segundo o conceito de Bobath. Optou-se por um registo observacional com uma Máquina Fotográfica Digital, um sistemas de Câmaras de Vídeo, uma Plataforma de Forças e, utilizaram-se ainda instrumentos como o Gross Motor Functional Measure– versão 88 itens, o Gross Motor Function Classification System, o Teste de Alcance Funcional Modificado e a ferramenta, Classificação Internacional de Funcionalidade, Incapacidade e Saúde – crianças e jovens. Resultados: Verificou-se um progresso nos ajustes posturais e na funcionalidade em geral, o que se repercutiu na restrição da participação e na limitação da actividade. A postura na posição de sentado, o deslocamento do centro de pressão, a capacidade de deslocamento no sentido anterior, bem como as capacidades motoras grosseiras modificaram-se em todas as crianças, tendo a criança B apresentado a maior e a criança A a menor capacidade de mudança após a intervenção. Conclusão: A intervenção segundo o Conceito de Bobath promoveu modificações neuromotoras, o que levaram a uma melhoria da funcionalidade geral, da mobilidade e do controlo postural da criança, refletindo-se nos ajustes posturais durante o alcance funcional dos membros superiores na posição de sentado. Verificou-se ainda, uma melhoria na restrição da participação e na limitação da actividade diária.

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A CIF é um sistema de classificação adotado pela OMS, que serve de referência universal para descrever, avaliar e medir saúde e incapacidade, a nível individual e ao nível da população. Contudo, apesar do interesse internacional gerado em torno da CIF, esta é considerada uma classificação complexa e extensa, fato que despoletou a criação de core sets – listas de itens da CIF especificamente selecionados pela sua relevância na descrição e qualificação de uma determinada condição de saúde – como resposta a esta problemática. Até à data, foram desenvolvidos core sets para várias patologias comuns. Contudo, apesar do controlo motor ser uma área de investigação muito reconhecida nos últimos 20 anos, ainda não possui um core set próprio. Assim, o objetivo deste estudo é contribuir para o desenvolvimento de um core set, com base na CIF-CJ, dirigido para uma descrição abrangente das competências inerentes a crianças, dos 6 aos 18 anos de idade, com défices no controlo motor. Deste modo, recorreu-se a uma revisão da literatura sobre a temática em estudo, de modo a reunir informação para a construção de uma proposta a core set, posteriormente sujeita ao escrutínio de peritos, através do recurso ao método de Delphi. Após várias rondas, foi alcançado um consenso acerca da lista final de códigos CIF que constituem o core set final.

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Resumen tomado de la publicación. Con el apoyo económico del departamento MIDE de la UNED

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Este trabalho desenvolve-se no âmbito do mestrado em educação especial, domí-nio cognitivo e motor. Trata-se de um projeto de intervenção emergente do trabalho diário como educadora de infância, num agrupamento vertical de escolas que segue um modelo inclusivo. O projeto centrou-se numa aluna do pré-escolar em vias de ingressar no 1º ciclo e nas estratégias e atividades envolvidas na preparação e sucesso desse ingresso. Nesse sentido tornou-se necessário pesquisar sobre a problemática específica da aluna, sobre práticas inclusivas e sobre métodos e metodologias de intervenção. Isto é, investigou-se sobre paralisia cerebral, escola inclusiva, no modo como se podem articular estas duas questões, sobre pedagogia diferenciada e diferenciação pedagógica e ainda sobre as linhas de orientação para o pré-escolar e sobre as metas a atingir no fim desse ciclo. Desenvolveu-se um processo em que se utilizaram os procedimentos da investiga-ção/ação através de vários instrumentos (pesquisa documental, entrevista, testes sociomé-tricos e observação naturalista) a partir dos quais se elaborou um projeto que foi posto em prática ao longo do ano letivo de 2010/2011. Pode constatar-se no fim da intervenção que os resultados foram positivos, pois permitiram à aluna alcançar os objetivos inicialmente previstos, atingindo as metas da edu-cação pré-escolar e ingressar no 1º ciclo. Foram surgindo novas questões, entre elas a necessidade de promover de forma mais intensa a participação da família e a continuidade do trabalho desenvolvido após uma mudança de ciclo, e portanto, do grupo e dos professores.

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Apraxia of speech (AOS) is typically described as a motor-speech disorder with clinically well-defined symptoms, but without a clear understanding of the underlying problems in motor control. A number of studies have compared the speech of subjects with AOS to the fluent speech of controls, but only a few have included speech movement data and if so, this was primarily restricted to the study of single articulators. If AOS reflects a basic neuromotor dysfunction, this should somehow be evident in the production of both dysfluent and perceptually fluent speech. The current study compared motor control strategies for the production of perceptually fluent speech between a young woman with apraxia of speech (AOS) and Broca’s aphasia and a group of age-matched control speakers using concepts and tools from articulation-based theories. In addition, to examine the potential role of specific movement variables on gestural coordination, a second part of this study involved a comparison of fluent and dysfluent speech samples from the speaker with AOS. Movement data from the lips, jaw and tongue were acquired using the AG-100 EMMA system during the reiterated production of multisyllabic nonwords. The findings indicated that although in general kinematic parameters of fluent speech were similar in the subject with AOS and Broca’s aphasia to those of the age-matched controls, speech task-related differences were observed in upper lip movements and lip coordination. The comparison between fluent and dysfluent speech characteristics suggested that fluent speech was achieved through the use of specific motor control strategies, highlighting the potential association between the stability of coordinative patterns and movement range, as described in Coordination Dynamics theory.

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O objetivo desta pesquisa, de delineamento quase-experimental, foi verificar a influência de um Programa de Intervenção Motora Inclusiva (PIMI) no desenvolvimento motor (DM) e social (DS) de crianças, portadoras (PNEE) e não portadoras de necessidades educacionais especiais (n-PNEE), com atrasos motores. A amostra desta pesquisa foi não probabilística, intencional, composta por 76 crianças (43 meninos e 33 meninas), com idades de 4 a 10 anos (M=7,00, DP=1,44), sendo 24 (31,6%) crianças PNEE e 52 (68,4%) crianças n-PNEE, que apresentaram desempenho motores inferiores a seus pares, configurando atrasos motores, avaliados por meio do Test of Gross Motor Development- 2 (TGMD-2) (ULRICH, 2000). Trinta e cinco crianças constituíram o Grupo de Intervenção (GI) e quarenta e uma crianças constituíram o Grupo Controle (GC). Para a avaliação do DM das crianças dos grupos foi utilizado o TGMD-2 e para a avaliação do DS das crianças do GI foi utilizado a estrutura de Níveis de Responsabilidade Social e Pessoal (HELLISON, 2003). O PIMI foi desenvolvido em 14 semanas, implementando os princípios do Contexto Motivacional para a Maestria e os pressupostos da estrutura TARGET. General Linear Model com medidas repetidas no fator tempo foi conduzida para avaliar os efeitos do PIMI no DM das crianças. Para a análise do DS foi utilizado o teste de Friedman. Os resultados indicaram que (1) crianças, PNEE e n- PNEE, do GI demonstraram ganhos significantes em habilidades de locomoção e de controle de objeto do pré-teste para o pós-teste, enquanto que para as crianças, PNEE e n-PNEE, do GC mudanças significativas não foram encontradas, (2) crianças, PNEE e n-PNEE, do GI demonstraram desempenho significantemente superior em habilidades de locomoção e de controle de objeto comparadas as crianças, PNEE e n-PNEE, do GC no pós-teste, (3) crianças PNEE, do GI, demonstraram padrões de mudanças positivas e significativas do pré-teste para o pós-teste nas habilidades de locomoção e de controle de objeto semelhantes aos seus pares n-PNE do mesmo grupo, (4) crianças PNEE, do GI, demonstraram no pós-teste desempenho significantemente superior nas habilidades de locomoção e controle de objetos comparadas aos seus pares PNEE do GC, (5) crianças n-PNEE, do GI, demonstraram no pós-teste desempenho significantemente superior nas habilidades de locomoção e de controle de objeto comparadas aos seus pares n-PNEE do GC, (6) crianças, PNEE e n-PNEE, do GI, demonstraram mudanças positivas e significativas no DS no contexto de aprendizagem por meio da conquista de níveis de responsabilidade social e pessoal mais elevados, no decorrer do PIMI, (7) crianças PNEE, do GI, demonstraram padrões de mudanças positivas e significativas no DS semelhantes aos seus pares n-PNEE do mesmo grupo. E mais, a implementação do Contexto Motivacional para a Maestria possibilitou a participação cooperativa e efetiva de todas as crianças indiferentemente dos níveis de habilidade motora.

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The aim of this Study was to compare the learning process of a highly complex ballet skill following demonstrations of point light and video models 16 participants divided into point light and video groups (ns = 8) performed 160 trials of a pirouette equally distributed in blocks of 20 trials alternating periods of demonstration and practice with a retention test a day later Measures of head and trunk oscillation coordination d1 parity from the model and movement time difference showed similarities between video and point light groups ballet experts evaluations indicated superiority of performance in the video over the point light group Results are discussed in terms of the task requirements of dissociation between head and trunk rotations focusing on the hypothesis of sufficiency and higher relevance of information contained in biological motion models applied to learning of complex motor skills