Nature of Spatial Coupling in Children With and Without Developmental Coordination Disorder in Ball Catching

in Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly

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Eryk P. PrzysuchaLakehead University

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Brian K.V. MarajUniversity of Alberta

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The nature of intra- and interlimb (bimanual) coordination was examined in ten boys with (M = 10.5 years, SD = 1.0) and without DCD (M = 10.8 years, SD = .9) in a two-handed catching task. Children with developmental coordination disorder (DCD) caught significantly fewer balls (MDCD = 56%, SD = 17.6 vs. MnoDCD = 93%, SD = 7.5), and both groups solved the “degrees of freedom problem” differently at intralimb level of coordination. Typically developing children coupled and decoupled the respective spatial relations, whereas the majority of children with DCD segmented their actions. At interlimb level, both groups exhibited a comparable degree of spatial symmetry. However, individual profiles also showed that children with varying degrees of movement issues exhibited movement patterns that were qualitatively and functionally diverse. Overall, in the context of previous research on interlimb coordination it appears that spatial, in addition to temporal organization, may be jeopardized in at least some children with DCD.

Eryk Przysucha is with the School of Kinesiology at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada. Brian K.V. Maraj is with the Department of Physical Education and Recreation at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada.

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