Literature DB >> 30789006

Development of rule-based eye-hand-decoupling in children and adolescents.

Marc Dalecki1, Diana J Gorbet2,3, Lauren E Sergio2,3.   

Abstract

In the present study, we characterize how the ability to decouple guiding visual information from a motor action emerges during childhood and adolescence. Sixty-two participants (age range 8-15 yrs.) completed two eye-hand coordination tasks. In a direct interaction task, vision and motor action were in alignment, and participants slid their finger along a vertical touch screen to move a cursor from a central target to one of four peripheral targets. In an eye-hand-decoupled task, eye and hand movements were made in different planes and cursor feedback was 180° reversed. We analyzed whether movement planning, timing and trajectory variables differed across age in both task conditions. There were no significant relationships between age and any movement planning, timing, or execution variables in the direct interaction task. In contrast, in the eye-hand-decoupled task, we found a relationship between age and several movement planning and timing variables. In adolescents (13-15 yrs.), movement planning and timing was significantly shorter than that of young children (8-10 yrs.). Eye-hand-decoupled maturation emerged mainly during late childhood (11-12 yrs.). Notably, we detected performance differences between young children and adolescents exclusively during the eye-hand decoupling task which required the integration of rule-based cognitive information into the motor action. Differences were not observed during the direct interaction task. Our results quantify an important milestone for eye-hand-decoupling development in late childhood, leading to improved rule-based motor performance in early adolescence. This eye-hand-decoupling development may be due to frontal lobe development linked to rule-based behavior and the strengthening of fronto-parietal networks.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cognitive-motor integration; direct mapping; vision and motor action; visuomotor performance; youth

Year:  2019        PMID: 30789006     DOI: 10.1080/09297049.2019.1578342

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Neuropsychol        ISSN: 0929-7049            Impact factor:   2.500


  3 in total

1.  Eye movement influences on coupled and decoupled eye-hand coordination tasks.

Authors:  Matthew A Yeomans; Brandon Phillips; Marc Dalecki; Jan M Hondzinski
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2021-06-11       Impact factor: 1.972

2.  Sex-related differences in visuomotor skill recovery following concussion in working-aged adults.

Authors:  Nicole Smeha; Ravneet Kalkat; Lauren E Sergio; Loriann M Hynes
Journal:  BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil       Date:  2022-04-20

3.  Coupled versus decoupled visuomotor feedback: Differential frontoparietal activity during curved reach planning on simultaneous functional near-infrared spectroscopy and electroencephalography.

Authors:  Duc Trung Le; Hiroki Ogawa; Masato Tsuyuhara; Kazuki Watanabe; Tatsunori Watanabe; Ryosuke Ochi; Hisao Nishijo; Masahito Mihara; Naoto Fujita; Susumu Urakawa
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2022-06-14       Impact factor: 3.405

  3 in total

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