Motor Competence in Children With and Without Ambliopia

The purpose of this study was to assess the motor competence of children with and without amblyopia. Study participants were 165 primary school children, aged 6–9 years, divided into three groups based on their visual acuity with the Snellen chart: (a) non-amblyopia, (b) corrected amblyopia, and (c)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Perceptual and motor skills 2021-04, Vol.128 (2), p.746-765
Hauptverfasser: Sá, Cristina dos Santos Cardoso de, Luz, Carlos, Pombo, André, Rodrigues, Luis Paulo, Cordovil, Rita
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 746
container_title Perceptual and motor skills
container_volume 128
creator Sá, Cristina dos Santos Cardoso de
Luz, Carlos
Pombo, André
Rodrigues, Luis Paulo
Cordovil, Rita
description The purpose of this study was to assess the motor competence of children with and without amblyopia. Study participants were 165 primary school children, aged 6–9 years, divided into three groups based on their visual acuity with the Snellen chart: (a) non-amblyopia, (b) corrected amblyopia, and (c) non-corrected amblyopia. We assessed the children’s motor competence with the Motor Competence Assessment battery (MCA) and their physical activity with the Physical Activity Questionnaire for Older Children (PAQ-C). The non-amblyopia group presented significantly better motor competence on the MCA than either the corrected amblyopia group or the non-corrected amblyopia group; there were no statistically significant motor differences between the two amblyopia subgroups. Amblyopia versus non-amblyopia differences on the MCA were mainly in stability and locomotor components, involving dynamic balance and the change of spatial position and direction of movement, but not in the manipulative component (ball throwing velocity and ball kicking velocity). Predictably, from within an integrated visual motor perspective of child development, our findings suggest that intact vision played an important role in children’s motor competence. The development of fundamental motor skills, especially of stability and locomotor skills, may be affected by poor visual processing in that participants with uncorrected amblyopia showed poor movement accuracy, uncoordinated movement, and impaired balance.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0031512520987359
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Predictably, from within an integrated visual motor perspective of child development, our findings suggest that intact vision played an important role in children’s motor competence. 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subjects Adolescent
Amblyopia
Child
Child Development
Exercise
Humans
Motor Skills
Visual Acuity
title Motor Competence in Children With and Without Ambliopia
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