| Literature DB >> 28187138 |
Greg Wood1,2, Charlotte A L Miles2, Ginny Coyles2, Omid Alizadehkhaiyat2, Samuel J Vine3, Joan N Vickers4, Mark R Wilson3.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to integrate a gaze training intervention (i.e., quiet eye training; QET) that has been shown to improve the throwing and catching skill of children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD), within an approach (i.e., group therapy) that might alleviate the negative psychosocial impact of these motor skill deficits. Twenty-one children with DCD were split into either QET (8 male 3 female, mean age of 8.6 years (SD = 1.04) or technical training (TT) groups (7 male 3 female, mean age of 8.6 years (SD = 1.84). The TT group were given movement-related instructions via video, relating to the throw and catch phases, while the QET group were also taught to fixate a target location on the wall prior to the throw (QE1) and to track the ball prior to the catch (QE2). Each group partook in a 4-week, group therapy intervention and measurements of QE duration and catching performance were taken before and after training, and at a 6-week delayed retention test. Parental feedback on psychosocial and motor skill outcomes was provided at delayed retention. Children improved their gaze control and catching coordination following QET, compared to TT. Mediation analysis showed that a longer QE aiming duration (QE1) predicted an earlier onset of tracking the ball prior to catching (QE2) which predicted catching success. Parents reported enhanced perceptions of their child's catching ability and general coordination in the QET group compared to the TT group. All parents reported improvements in their child's confidence, social skills and predilection for physical activity following the trial. The findings offer initial support for an intervention that practitioners could apply to address deficits in the motor and psychosocial skills of children with DCD. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02904980.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28187138 PMCID: PMC5302797 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0171782
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic and clinical characteristics (means and SD) of the Quiet Eye Training (QET) and Technical Training (TT) groups.
| QET | TT | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (yrs.) | 8.55 (1.04) | 8.60 (1.84) | .993 |
| MABC-2% | 2.55 (2.09) | 1.93 (2.19) | .552 |
| ADHD % | 87.91 (17.10) | 90.50 (14.70) | .721 |
Fig 1A CONSORT flow diagram outlining participant recruitment and analysis.
A week-by-week breakdown of the training activities and instructions for Quiet Eye Trained (QET) and Technically Trained (TT) groups.
| Week | Activities | QET Instructions | TT Instructions |
|---|---|---|---|
| • 20 warm up MABC-2 throw and catches | Focus your eyes on the target and count to two before you start a smooth throwing action | Throw at a target using a smooth throwing action. | |
| • Watch instructional video for throwing | |||
| • Target-related activities (throwing bean bags into buckets, throwing balls at cricket stumps, throwing at cut-out faces stuck on a wall). | |||
| • Started at short distances and increase distance based on individual success | |||
| • Competitive team games using the same tasks | |||
| • De-brief and reinforced instructions | |||
| • 20 warm up MABC-2 throw and catches. | Keep your eye on the ball until it comes back into your cupped hands | Concentrate on the ball and cup your hands together. | |
| • Watch instructional video for catching | |||
| • Catching-related activities (catching large sponge balls and beanbags, catching with a bucket instead of their hands, catching while moving around). | |||
| • Varied distance and speed of the catch | |||
| • Competitive team games using the same tasks. | |||
| • De-brief and reinforced instruction | |||
| • 20 warm up MABC-2 throw and catches | Questioning on previous instructions and instruction on combining coaching points together | Questioning on previous instructions and instruction on combining coaching points together. | |
| • Watch instructional video linking the throw and catch | |||
| • Throwing and catching tasks (throwing and catching between participants while walking around, throwing and catching a ball along a chain, rounders with a larger sponge ball where children hit the ball with their hands rather than a bat) | |||
| • 20 warm up MABC-2 throw and catches | Questioning on previous instructions and reiteration of coaching points | Questioning on previous instructions and reiteration of coaching points | |
| • Children chose their favourite games from the sessions and were prompted to remember the related coaching points |
The qualitative catching performance scale.
| Outcome | Code | Description |
|---|---|---|
| No reaction | 0 | Makes no move towards the ball as it comes back |
| Reaction, no contact | 1 | Makes some move towards ball, no contact, no attempt at a catch (delayed) |
| Inaccurate/delayed reaction, no contact | 2 | Reacts to ball direction and makes effort to catch the ball. |
| Delayed reaction, no contact before bounce | 3 | Reactions to ball direction and makes effort to catch the ball. Ball bounces/contacts some part of the body |
| Delayed reaction, limited contact | 4 | Reacts to the ball, poor throw results in it bouncing/contacting another surface before catch can be made |
| Ball contacts hands | 5 | The ball contacts one or both hands but there is no control |
| Trap ball, no hands | 6 | Ball hits body and trapped with arms but not hands |
| Fumble | 7 | Ball is fumbled and drops to the ground |
| Trap | 8 | The ball is grasped by both hands, with the aid of the trunk or other body part |
| Fumble but re-grasped | 9 | Clean catch completed after a fumble without ball hitting another surface |
| Clean controlled catch | 10 | The catch is made exclusively with the palms and fingers |
Fig 2Mean (s.e.m.) QE1 duration (ms; top), QE2 onset (ms; middle) and QE2 duration (ms; bottom) data for Quiet Eye Training (QET) and Technical Training (TT) groups across baseline (QET n = 11, TT n = 10), retention (QET n = 11, TT n = 10), and delayed retention tests (QET n = 9, TT n = 9).
Fig 3Mean (s.e.m.) number of catches (0–50; top) and catching performance score (0–10; bottom) for Quiet Eye Training (QET) and Technical Training (TT) groups across baseline (QET n = 11, TT n = 10), retention (QET n = 11, TT n = 10), and delayed retention tests (QET n = 9, TT n = 9).
Parental responses given to (Part I) Likert scale questions (means and SD) and (Part II) the open-ended questions (% frequency of parents who made statements) between Quiet Eye Training (QET) and Technical Training (TT) groups.
| QET | TT | CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Has your child’s throwing and catching improved? | 4.38 (.52) | 2.83 (.75) | 0.91–2.20 |
| Has your child’s overall coordination improved? | 3.88 (.83) | 2.67 (1.03) | 0.28–2.15 |
| Has your child’s confidence improved? | 4.13 (.64) | 3.83 (.75) | -0.40–0.99 |
| Has your child’s attitude towards physical activity improved? | 3.88 (.99) | 3.00 (1.67) | -0.49–2.25 |
| Has your child chosen to take part in physical activity more often since taking part in this study? | 3.88 (.99) | 4.00 (1.47) | -1.37–1.13 |
| Motor skill improvements | 78% | 56% | -0.07–0.17 |
| Improved confidence | 89% | 67% | -0.07–0.15 |
| Higher predilection for sport | 78% | 78% | -0.10–0.10 |
| Enjoyment | 78% | 89% | -0.08–0.12 |
| Social benefits | 67% | 67% | -0.12–0.12 |
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