Robertson Ringenbach Shannon D, Chua Romeo, Maraj Brian K V, Kao James C, Weeks Daniel J
Motor Development Laboratory at Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-0404, USA.
Motor Control. 2002 Oct;6(4):388-407. doi: 10.1123/mcj.6.4.388.
Previous experiments involving discrete unimanual tasks have shown that individuals with Down syndrome (DS) have auditory/verbal-motor deficits. The present study investigated unimanual and bimanual continuous perceptual-motor actions in adults with DS. Ten adults with DS, 10 typical adults, and 10 children drew continuous circles at increasing periods bimanually and unimanually with each hand. Movement was paced by either a visual or an auditory metronome. The results revealed that for circle shape and coordination measures, children and adults were more accurate with the visual metronome, whereas adults with DS were more accurate with the auditory metronome. In the unimanual tasks, adults with DS displayed hand asymmetries on spatial measures. In the bimanual task, however, adults with DS adopted an in-phase coordination pattern and stability more similar to adults than children. These results suggest that bimanual coordination in adults with DS is functioning effectively despite hand asymmetries evident in unimanual performance.
先前涉及离散单手任务的实验表明,唐氏综合征(DS)患者存在听觉/言语运动缺陷。本研究调查了成年DS患者的单手和双手连续感知运动动作。10名成年DS患者、10名典型成年人和10名儿童用每只手以逐渐增加的时长进行双手和单手画连续圆圈的动作。动作由视觉或听觉节拍器进行节奏控制。结果显示,对于圆圈形状和协调性测量,儿童和成年人在视觉节拍器下更准确,而成年DS患者在听觉节拍器下更准确。在单手任务中,成年DS患者在空间测量上表现出手的不对称性。然而,在双手任务中,成年DS患者采用了同相协调模式,并且稳定性与成年人更为相似,而非儿童。这些结果表明,尽管成年DS患者在单手表现中明显存在手的不对称性,但他们的双手协调性仍能有效发挥作用。