Motor Adaptation Deficits in Children with Developmental Coordination Disorder and/or Reading Disorder

Procedural learning has been mainly tested through motor sequence learning tasks in children with neurodevelopmental disorders, especially with isolated Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) and Reading Disorder (RD). Studies on motor adaptation are scarcer and more controversial. This study aim...

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Published inChildren (Basel) Vol. 11; no. 4; p. 491
Main Authors Danna, Jérémy, Lê, Margaux, Tallet, Jessica, Albaret, Jean-Michel, Chaix, Yves, Ducrot, Stéphanie, Jover, Marianne
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 01.04.2024
MDPI
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Summary:Procedural learning has been mainly tested through motor sequence learning tasks in children with neurodevelopmental disorders, especially with isolated Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) and Reading Disorder (RD). Studies on motor adaptation are scarcer and more controversial. This study aimed to compare the performance of children with isolated and associated DCD and RD in a graphomotor adaptation task. In total, 23 children with RD, 16 children with DCD, 19 children with DCD-RD, and 21 typically developing (TD) children wrote trigrams both in the conventional (from left to right) and opposite (from right to left) writing directions. The results show that movement speed and accuracy were more impacted by the adaptation condition (opposite writing direction) in children with neurodevelopmental disorders than TD children. Our results also reveal that children with RD have less difficulty adapting their movement than children with DCD. Children with DCD-RD had the most difficulty, and analysis of their performance suggests a cumulative effect of the two neurodevelopmental disorders in motor adaptation.
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ISSN:2227-9067
2227-9067
DOI:10.3390/children11040491