Abstract

This study examined stepping accuracy, gaze behavior, and state-anxiety in children with (N = 21, age M = 10.81, SD = 1.89) and without (N = 18, age M = 11.39, SD = 2.06) developmental coordination disorder (DCD) during an adaptive locomotion task. Participants walked at a self-selected pace along a pathway, placing their foot into a raised rectangular floor-based target box followed by either no obstacles, one obstacle, or two obstacles. Stepping kinematics and accuracy were determined using three-dimensional motion capture, whilst gaze was determined using mobile eye-tracking equipment. The children with DCD displayed greater foot placement error and variability when placing their foot within the target box and were more likely to make contact with its edges than their typically developing (TD) peers. The DCD group also displayed greater variability in the length and width of their steps in the approach to the target box. No differences were observed between groups in any of the gaze variables measured, in mediolateral velocity of the center of mass during the swing phase into the target box, or in the levels of self-reported state-anxiety experienced prior to facing each task. We therefore provide the first quantifiable evidence that deficits to foot placement accuracy and precision may be partially responsible for the increased incidence of trips and falls in DCD, and that these deficits are likely to occur independently from gaze behavior and state-anxiety.

Highlights

  • Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD), known as dyspraxia, affects around 5% of children and is characterized by difficulties in general motor skill learning and execution, which are independent of intellectual problems, visual impairments, and physical or diagnosed neurological disorders (American Psychiatric Association, 2013)

  • Total Box Contacts Results from a Mann–Whitney U-test showed a significant difference between groups, U = 118, z = −2.076, p = 0.038, r = -0.3329, with more box contacts observed in the DCD group (M = 1.82 ± 1.41) compared to the typically developing (TD) group (M = 1.00 ± 1.24)

  • Given the similarities in gaze behavior and anxiety between the DCD and TD groups, the results of the present study suggest that difficulties producing precise stepping actions in children with DCD occur independent of anxiety and overt attentional processes related to gaze behavior

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Summary

Introduction

Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD), known as dyspraxia, affects around 5% of children and is characterized by difficulties in general motor skill learning and execution, which are independent of intellectual problems, visual impairments, and physical or diagnosed neurological disorders (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Stepping Accuracy in DCD Children are often described as awkward or clumsy and affect the ability to perform activities of daily living (ADLs). Children with DCD appear to use shorter steps and a bent-forward posture to optimize safety when walking on a treadmill (Deconinck et al, 2006a) and display a reduced ability to control their momentum when crossing obstacles (Deconinck et al, 2010). Children with DCD trip, fall, and bump into obstacles more frequently than their typically developing (TD) peers (Fox and Lent, 1996; Cleaton et al, 2020) which can negatively impact everyday life and the willingness to engage in sports and social activities (Kirby et al, 2011). Problems with walking can extend into adulthood, as exemplified by a recent study that showed adults with DCD reported falling more than 10 times over a 6-month period and tripping between one and five times per week (Scott-Roberts and Purcell, 2018)

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