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How Children with Congenital Limb Deficiencies Visually Attend to Their Limbs and Prostheses: Eye Tracking of Displayed Still Images and Visuospatial Body Knowledge.

Hiroshi ManoSayaka FujiwaraNobuhiko Haga
Published in: Developmental neurorehabilitation (2021)
Purpose: This study aimed to clarify how children with congenital limb deficiencies visually attend to their bodies, particularly their limbs and prostheses.Methods: Participants included children with and without congenital limb deficiencies. They were shown photographs of themselves and their visual attention was measured using an eye tracker.Results: Six children with lower limb deficiencies (age [mean ± SD]: 8.8 ± 2.9; 2 girls and 4 boys), six children with upper limb deficiencies (age: 7.0 ± 2.3; 2 girls and 4 boys), and ten control children (age: 7.7 ± 1.9; 5 girls and 5 boys) were included. Children with congenital upper/lower limb deficiencies looked at their upper/lower limbs as often or more than the control children. Prompts to direct their visual attention to their limbs had limited efficacy.Conclusions: To improve the body knowledge of limbs, approaches other than visual recognition prompting, such as improving linguistic understanding, might be considered.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • lower limb
  • healthcare
  • working memory
  • upper limb