Persistence of motor-cognitive inhibition deficits in children with developmental coordination disorder (DCD): a longitudinal perspective.
Reza Abdollahipour, Ludvík Valtr, Kamila Banátová, Lucia Bizovská, Tomáš Klein, Zdeněk Svoboda, Bert Steenbergen, Peter Henry Wilson
Abstract
Open AccessThe aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate how double-jump reaching task (DJRT) performance varies as a function of inhibitory load in children (6-12 years) with severe and moderate forms of developmental coordination disorder (s-DCD and m-DCD, respectively), compared with typically developing children (TDC). We tested 20 s-DCD, 43 m-DCD, and 192 TDC children, divided into younger (6-8 years) and older (9-12 years) age bands within each motor group. Children were tested twice, the second time after a 1-year follow-up, on two DJRT versions: standard (DJRT) and anti-jump (AJRT). Stimuli for each task appeared on a 42-inch touchscreen with a central home base and three target locations at - 20°, 0°, and 20°, 40 cm above the home base. For the DJRT, children lifted their index finger from the home base to the displayed target; 80% of trials were non-jump (to the central target) and 20% were jump where the target shifted left or right at lift-off. For the AJRT, they instead pointed to the contralateral location on anti-jump trials. Movement time difference measured the time difference between jump/anti-jump and no-jump trials. For the DJRT, there was no motor group effect, while older children made faster adjustments to jump targets. For the AJRT, the s-DCD group was consistently slower and had a significantly larger MTdiff score than both the m-DCD and TDC groups, regardless of age. The findings indicate that while cognitive-motor coupling improves with age in children with DCD, those with s-DCD have persistent difficulties.