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Concurrent maturation of visuomotor skills and motion perception in typically-developing children and adolescents.

Ewa Niechwiej-SzwedoKimberly MeierLisa Wt ChristianMina NouredaneshJames Y TungPamela J BrydenDeborah E Giaschi
Published in: Developmental psychobiology (2019)
Perceptual and visuomotor skills undergo considerable development from early childhood into adolescence; however, the concurrent maturation of these skills has not yet been examined. This study assessed visuomotor function and motion perception in a cross-section of 226 typically-developing children between 4 and 16 years of age. Participants were tested on three tasks hypothesized to engage the dorsal visual stream: threading a bead on a needle, marking dots using a pen, and discriminating form defined by motion contrast. Mature performance was reached between 8 and 12 years, with youngest maturation for kinematic measures for a reach-to-grasp task, and oldest maturation for a precision tapping task. Performance on the motion perception task shared no association with motor skills after controlling for age.
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