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Developmental improvements in reaching correction efficiency are associated with an increased ability to represent action mentally

journal contribution
posted on 2015-07-29, 00:00 authored by Ian FuelscherIan Fuelscher, J Williams, Christian HydeChristian Hyde
We investigated the purported association between developmental changes in the efficiency of online reaching corrections and improved action representation. Younger children (6-7years), older children (8-12years), adolescents (13-17years), and young adults (18-24years) completed a double-step reaching paradigm and a motor imagery task. Results showed similar nonlinear performance improvements across both tasks, typified by substantial changes in efficiency after 6 or 7years followed by incremental improvements. Regression showed that imagery ability significantly predicted reaching efficiency and that this association stayed constant across age. Findings provide the first empirical evidence that more efficient online control through development is predicted, partly, by improved action representation.

History

Journal

Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

Volume

140

Pagination

74 - 91

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

eISSN

1096-0457

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Elsevier