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Performance of gesture in children with and without DCD: effects of sensory input modalities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2002

Stefania Zoia
Affiliation:
Division of Child Neurology and Psychiatry, Burlo Garofolo Maternal and Child Health Institute, Trieste, Italy.
Giovanna Pelamatti
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy.
Marina Cuttini
Affiliation:
Unit of Epidemiology, Burlo Garofolo Maternal and Child Health Institute, Trieste, Italy.
Veronica Casotto
Affiliation:
Unit of Epidemiology, Burlo Garofolo Maternal and Child Health Institute, Trieste, Italy.
Aldo Scabar
Affiliation:
Division of Child Neurology and Psychiatry, Burlo Garofolo Maternal and Child Health Institute, Trieste, Italy.
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Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the extent to which gesture performance depends on input modality and whether gestural development patterns differ in children with and without developmental coordination disorder (DCD). Therefore, development of limb gesture was studied in 140 children – 105 control children(94 males, 11 females) and in 35 children with DCD (29 males, six females) divided into three age bands: 5 to 6 years, 7 to 8 years, and 9 to 10 years. Transitive gestural skills were investigated through four input modalities: Imitation, Visual plus Tactile , Visual, and Verbal. Results indicate that limb gestural skills in normally developing children follow a progressive maturation pattern: Imitation, Visual plus Tactile, and visual routes appear to mature before the verbal route and appear to be available earlier to enable the child to perform a correct gesture. The performance of children with DCD throughout the four modalities suggested a general maturational delay. When gestures were required through the Verbal modality, there was a specific deficit in using sensory–motor information and in integrating it into a motor representation. In the Verbal modality, children with DCD performed consistently worse than their control peers and the difference in performance tended to increase rather than improve with age.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
© 2002 Mac Keith Press

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