Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford , Oxford , UK.
PeerJ. 2013 Nov 28;1:e217. doi: 10.7717/peerj.217. eCollection 2013.
Several studies have found evidence of motor deficits in poor readers. There is no obvious reason for motor and literacy skills to go together, and it has been suggested that both deficits could be indicative of an underlying problem with cerebellar function and/or procedural learning. However, the picture is complicated by the fact that reading problems often co-occur with oral language impairments, which have also been linked with motor deficits. This raises the question of whether motor deficits characterise poor readers when language impairment has been accounted for - and vice versa. We considered these questions by assessing motor deficits associated with reading disability (RD) and language impairment (LI). A large community sample provided a subset of 9- to 10-year-olds, selected to oversample children with reading and/or language difficulties, to give 37 children with comorbid LI + RD, 67 children with RD only, 32 children with LI only, and 117 typically-developing (TD) children with neither type of difficulty. These children were given four motor tasks that taxed speed, sequence, and imitation abilities to differing extents. Different patterns of results were found for the four motor tasks. There was no effect of RD or LI on two speeded fingertip tapping tasks, one of which involved sequencing of movements. LI, but not RD, was associated with problems in imitating hand positions and slowed performance on a speeded peg-moving task that required a precision grip. Fine motor deficits in poor readers may be more a function of language impairment than literacy problems.
多项研究发现阅读困难者存在运动缺陷的证据。运动和读写技能之间没有明显的联系,有人认为这两种缺陷都可能表明小脑功能和/或程序性学习存在潜在问题。然而,由于阅读问题通常与口语语言障碍同时发生,而口语语言障碍也与运动缺陷有关,因此情况变得复杂。这就提出了一个问题,即在考虑到语言障碍的情况下,运动缺陷是否是阅读困难者的特征——反之亦然。我们通过评估与阅读障碍(RD)和语言障碍(LI)相关的运动缺陷来考虑这些问题。一个大型社区样本提供了一个 9-10 岁儿童的子集,该子集选择了阅读和/或语言困难的儿童进行过采样,以提供 37 名同时存在 LI + RD 的儿童、67 名仅存在 RD 的儿童、32 名仅存在 LI 的儿童和 117 名没有任何类型困难的典型发育(TD)儿童。这些儿童接受了四项运动任务,这些任务在不同程度上测试了速度、序列和模仿能力。四项运动任务的结果模式不同。RD 或 LI 对两个快速指尖敲击任务都没有影响,其中一个任务涉及运动的序列。LI,但不是 RD,与模仿手部位置的问题有关,并且在需要精确握力的快速 peg 移动任务中的表现也较慢。阅读困难者的精细运动缺陷可能更多地是语言障碍而不是读写问题的结果。