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Using a group game increases preschoolers' step count.

Alexandra N Mercado BaezTyler-Curtis C ElliottKevin M Ayres
Published in: Journal of applied behavior analysis (2023)
Children should engage in at least 60 min of physical activity daily to develop or maintain healthy habits (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2021a). Previous research suggests that contingent attention is a powerful tool for increasing moderate to vigorous physical activity. In this study, the researchers examined the effects of a group game on steps per minute at recess in an inclusive classroom with preschoolers. The researcher taught the game called the T-Rex game in which the game rules (chasing students who were moving) involved contingencies for natural attention to follow moderate to vigorous physical activity. The results showed a functional relation between step count and the group game in which students engaged in higher step counts when the group game was in place than during baseline. These findings extend other work by demonstrating that contingent attention embedded in group games can increase step count.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • virtual reality
  • working memory
  • body mass index
  • peripheral blood
  • young adults
  • high intensity