Publication | Closed Access
Timing and Motor Control in Clumsy Children
134
Citations
29
References
1992
Year
Cognitive ScienceKinesiologyClumsy ChildrenControl DifficultiesMotor SkillMotor DevelopmentCognitive DevelopmentTime PerceptionMotor ControlSocial SciencesMotor DisorderHuman MovementMotor DifficultyExperimental PsychologyRepetitive MovementsChild DevelopmentHealth Sciences
The study examined timing control in clumsy children and employed the Wing-Kristofferson (1973) model of repetitive movements in an attempt to identify the locus of timing control difficulties in clumsy children. Two groups of children classified as normal and clumsy (ages 6-7 and 9-10) performed tapping and perception of duration and loudness tasks. Results indicated that clumsy children were significantly more variable than normal children in maintaining a set rate of tapping and in accurately judging time intervals. Evidence indicated that the source of timing control problems in clumsy children may be in a central timekeeping mechanism, possibly the cerebellum.
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