File(s) under permanent embargo
Impaired motor inhibition in developmental coordination disorder
journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-01, 00:00 authored by Jason HeJason He, Ian FuelscherIan Fuelscher, J Coxon, Pam BarhounPam Barhoun, D Parmar, Peter EnticottPeter Enticott, Christian HydeChristian HydeThis study aimed to evaluate the 'inhibitory deficit' hypothesis of developmental coordination disorder (DCD). We adopted a multifaceted approach, investigating two distinct, yet complimentary facets of motor inhibition: action restraint and action cancellation. This was achieved using carefully constructed versions of the 'Go/No-go' and 'Stop-signal' tasks, respectively. The sample comprised 11 young adults with DCD aged between 18 and 30 years of age and 11 typically developing, age-matched controls. Participants completed both the 'Go/No-go' and 'Stop-signal' tasks to assess action restraint and action cancellation respectively. Individuals with DCD were less efficient than their typically developing peers at performing both action restraint and action cancellation, indicated by significantly reduced action restraint efficiency index scores on the 'Go/No-go' task and a trend towards longer stop-signal reaction times on the 'Stop-signal' task. This work clarifies disparate evidence speaking to the integrity of action restraint in DCD and provides the first account of action cancellation in DCD using a purpose-built measure. In support of the inhibitory deficit hypothesis of DCD, our results suggest that young adults with DCD experience broad difficulties with engaging inhibitory mechanisms during motor behaviour.
History
Journal
Brain and cognitionVolume
127Pagination
23 - 33Publisher
ElsevierLocation
Amsterdam, The NetherlandsPublisher DOI
eISSN
1090-2147Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2018, ElsevierUsage metrics
Read the peer-reviewed publication
Categories
Keywords
Developmental coordination disorderDevelopmental disordersGo\/no-go taskMotor controlMotor inhibitionMovement disordersResponse inhibitionStop-signal taskScience & TechnologySocial SciencesLife Sciences & BiomedicineNeurosciencesPsychology, ExperimentalNeurosciences & NeurologyPsychologyHOT EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONINFERIOR FRONTAL-CORTEXGO\/NO-GORESPONSE-INHIBITIONSTOP-SIGNALINTRACORTICAL INHIBITIONACTION RESTRAINTTASK-DIFFICULTYYOUNG-ADULTSCHILDREN