Abstract
Socio-communicative motor behaviors (e.g., gesture, imitation, pantomime) are an outward manifestation of the dynamic integration of several fundamental processes (e.g., motor function, social perception) that are essential for social development. Although childhood premorbid motor abnormalities are common in children that ultimately develop psychosis in adulthood, little is known about the early childhood socio-communicative motor behaviors in individuals at risk for psychotic disorders.
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