| Literature DB >> 26941690 |
Vincent O Mancini1, Daniela Rigoli1, John Cairney2, Lynne D Roberts1, Jan P Piek1.
Abstract
Poor motor skills have been shown to be associated with a range of psychosocial issues, including internalizing problems (anxiety and depression). While well-documented empirically, our understanding of why this relationship occurs remains theoretically underdeveloped. The Elaborated Environmental Stress Hypothesis by Cairney et al. (2013) provides a promising framework that seeks to explain the association between motor skills and internalizing problems, specifically in children with developmental coordination disorder (DCD). The framework posits that poor motor skills predispose the development of internalizing problems via interactions with intermediary environmental stressors. At the time the model was proposed, limited direct evidence was available to support or refute the framework. Several studies and developments related to the framework have since been published. This mini-review seeks to provide an up-to-date overview of recent developments related to the Elaborated Environmental Stress Hypothesis. We briefly discuss the past research that led to its development, before moving to studies that have investigated the framework since it was proposed. While originally developed within the context of DCD in childhood, recent developments have found support for the model in community samples. Through the reviewed literature, this article provides support for the Elaborated Environmental Stress Hypothesis as a promising theoretical framework that explains the psychosocial correlates across the broader spectrum of motor ability. However, given its recent conceptualization, ongoing evaluation of the Elaborated Environmental Stress Hypothesis is recommended.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; depression; environmental stress; internalizing problems; motor coordination; motor proficiency; motor skills
Year: 2016 PMID: 26941690 PMCID: PMC4763061 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Summary of recent, peer-reviewed empirical support for the elaborated environmental stress hypothesis by Cairney et al. (2013).
| Study | Research design | Sample type | Key supporting findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Longitudinal | 6,902 | Community; children (7–10 years) | Motor skills at 7 years of age predict mental health problems at 10 years of age. Poor social skills, peer victimization, self-esteem, and perceived scholastic competence mediate this relationship, in children with probable DCD. | |
| Cross-sectional | 93 | Community; adolescents (12–16 years) | Self-perceptions mediate the association between motor skills and internalizing problems | |
| Cross-sectional | 532 | Community; children (4–6 years) | Social skills mediate the association between motor skills and internalizing problems | |
| Cross-sectional | 327 | Community; adolescent females (12–16 years) | Self-concepts mediate the association between motor skills and internalizing problems | |
| Intervention | 35 | Clinical; adolescents (13–17 years) | Intervention improving exercise in populations with low motor competence also improved their physical self-perceptions | |
| Intervention | 337∗ | Community; children (4–6 years) | Interventions improving motor skills and participation improve prosocial behavior | |
| Longitudinal | 189∗ | Community; lifespan (0–40 years) | Childhood motor difficulties predict internalizing problems in adulthood. Limited by retrospective report of childhood motor difficulties at age 29–35 years. Mental health problems measured at 8 years, 22–26 and 29–36 years only. |