Bimanual strategies for object retrieval in infants and young children

被引:0
|
作者
Deirdre Birtles
Shirley Anker
Janette Atkinson
Rhiannon Shellens
Alexandra Briscoe
Melissa Mahoney
Oliver Braddick
机构
[1] University College London,Division of Psychology and Language Sciences
[2] University College London,UCL Medical School
[3] University of Oxford,Department of Experimental Psychology
来源
关键词
Bimanual coordination; Human infants; Goal synchronization; Hand preference;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Age differences in goal-directed bimanual coordination were studied in typically developing infants aged 9–29 months, compared to a group of children aged 4–6 years and a group of adults, using an object retrieval task. This task required one hand to open and hold the lid of a transparent box, while the second hand retrieved a small toy from inside the box. Well-coordinated retrieval strategies with differentiated use of the two hands were not established in the majority of infants until 18 months of age. Temporal analysis of the hand actions revealed that, unlike adults who perform the task with close synchronization of the hands at the start, the infants performed the task sequentially and did not activate the second hand until the first hand had started to lift the lid. The children’s hand preferences for the two-hand actions also contrasted with those of adults. In children aged 27–29 months and 4–6 years, there was a preference for using the right-hand to lift the lid while in right-handed adults, the reverse pattern was observed. The results suggest that although bimanual coordination starts to develop in the second year of life, the adult pattern of performance on this task is not observed before 6 years of age. It is likely that further maturation of the brain networks involved in bimanual coordination, and in particular functional interhemispheric transfer via the corpus callosum, is required before automatization of bimanual hand actions is achieved.
引用
收藏
页码:207 / 218
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [42] Comparison of Permethrin-Based Treatment Strategies against Scabies in Infants and Young Children
    Riebenbauer, Katharina
    Weber, Philipp B.
    Haitel, Andrea
    Walochnik, Julia
    Valencak, Julia
    Meyersburg, Damian
    Kinaciyan, Tamar
    Handisurya, Alessandra
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 2022, 245 : 184 - 189
  • [43] INTERVENTION STRATEGIES FOR HIGH-RISK INFANTS AND YOUNG-CHILDREN - TJOSSEM,TD
    NURCOMBE, B
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 1978, 17 (04): : 737 - 738
  • [44] INTERVENTION STRATEGIES FOR HIGH-RISK INFANTS AND YOUNG-CHILDREN - TJOSSEM,TD
    ASERLIND, L
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MENTAL DEFICIENCY, 1977, 82 (03): : 316 - 317
  • [45] Bimanual control strategies
    Wang, Chaoyi
    Shea, Charles H.
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 72 (04): : 966 - 978
  • [46] The effects of category distinctiveness and stimulus relations on young children's use of retrieval clustering strategies
    Nida, RE
    Lange, G
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1995, 122 (04): : 345 - 353
  • [47] Relativization Strategies in Young Spanish - Speaking Children: Comparison Between Production and Retrieval of Narrative Performances
    Luisa Silva, Maria
    Dolores Plana, Maria
    LOGOS-REVISTA DE LINGUISTICA FILOSOFIA Y LITERATURA, 2014, 24 (02): : 101 - 122
  • [48] ONSET OF BIMANUAL HANDEDNESS IN INFANTS
    RAMSAY, DS
    CAMPOS, JJ
    FENSON, L
    INFANT BEHAVIOR & DEVELOPMENT, 1979, 2 (01): : 69 - 76
  • [49] ADJUSTMENT OF REACHING TO CHANGE IN OBJECT POSITION BY YOUNG INFANTS
    WILLATTS, P
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1979, 50 (03) : 911 - 913
  • [50] Young infants' perception of object unity in rotation displays
    Johnson, SP
    Cohen, LB
    Marks, KH
    Johnson, KL
    INFANCY, 2003, 4 (02) : 285 - 295