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Auditory and visual information do not affect self-paced bilateral finger tapping in children with DCD
Authors:Roche Renuka  Wilms-Floet Anna Maria  Clark Jane E  Whitall Jill
Affiliation:a Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States
b Department of Pediatrics, Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, MD, United States
c Department of Kinesiology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States
Abstract:Children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) are more variable in timing their fingers to an external cue. In this study, we investigated the intrinsic coordination properties of self-selected anti-phase finger tapping with and without vision and audition in children with and without DCD and compared their performance to that of adults. Ten children with DCD (Mean age = 7.12 ± 0.3 years), 10 age- and sex-matched typically developing (TD) children, and 10 adults participated in this study. Participants tapped their fingers in anti-phase at a self-selected speed under four different sensory conditions: (1) with vision and audition, (2) with vision but no audition, (3) with audition but no vision, and (4) without vision and audition. We assessed intertap interval (ITI), variability of ITI, mean relative phasing (RP) between the fingers and the variability in RP. Children with DCD adopted a similar mean frequency, but were less accurate and more variable than the other groups. The different sensory conditions did not affect performance in any of the groups. We conclude that visual and auditory feedback of tapping are not salient information sources for bilateral self-selected tapping and that children with DCD are intrinsically less accurate and more variable in their tapping frequency and coordination.
Keywords:3250   3253
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