Abstract
Background: Motor impairments contribute to performance variability in children with cerebral palsy (CP) during motor skill learning. Non-immersive virtual environments (VEs) are popular interventions to promote motor learning in children with hemiplegic CP. Greater understanding of performance variability as compared to typically developing (TD) peers during motor learning in VEs may inform clinical decisions about practice dose and challenge progression.Purpose: (1) To quantify within-child (i.e., across different timepoints) and between-child (i.e., between children at the same timepoint) variability in motor skill acquisition, retention and transfer in a non-immersive VE in children with CP as compared to TD children; and (2) To explore the relationship between the amount of within-child variability during skill acquisition and learning outcomes.Methods: Secondary data analysis of 2 studies in which 13 children with hemiplegic CP and 67 TD children aged 7–14 years undertook repeated trials of a novel standing postural control task in acquisition, retention and transfer sessions. Changes in performance across trials and sessions in children with CP as compared to TD children and between younger (7–10 years) and older (11–14 years) children were assessed using mixed effects models. Raw scores were converted to z-scores to meet model distributional assumptions. Performance variability was quantified as the standard deviation of z-scores.Results: TD children outperformed children with CP and older children outperformed younger children at each session. Older children with CP had the least between-child variability in acquisition and the most in retention, while older TD children demonstrated the opposite pattern. Younger children with CP had consistently high between-child variability, with no difference between sessions. Within-child variability was highest in younger children, regardless of group. Within-child variability was more pronounced in TD children as compared to children with CP. The relationship between the amount of within-child variability in performance and performance outcome at acquisition, retention and transfer sessions was task-specific, with a positive correlation for 1 study and a negative correlation in the other.Conclusions: Findings, though preliminary and limited by small sample size, can inform subsequent research to explore VE-specific causes of performance variability, including differing movement execution requirements and individual characteristics such as motivation, attention and visuospatial abilities.
Highlights
Cerebral palsy (CP) is the leading cause of physical disability in childhood [1,2,3,4]
Information-processing, attention, motor planning, and motor execution impairments can differ in children with CP as compared to typically developing (TD) peers, influencing the rate and extent of motor learning [12, 13]
Across sessions, mixed effects models show that the largest effects are associated with trial (t = 21.027, p < 0.001), with a positive linear effect indicating that most participants improve over time
Summary
Cerebral palsy (CP) is the leading cause of physical disability in childhood [1,2,3,4]. While children with CP improve in new motor task learning with practice [14,15,16], they may require greater duration of practice to achieve competency, while demonstrating lower accuracy and greater variability in task performance outcomes over repeated trials as compared to TD peers [14, 16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25]. Motor impairments contribute to performance variability in children with cerebral palsy (CP) during motor skill learning. Greater understanding of performance variability as compared to typically developing (TD) peers during motor learning in VEs may inform clinical decisions about practice dose and challenge progression. Purpose: [1] To quantify within-child (i.e., across different timepoints) and between-child (i.e., between children at the same timepoint) variability in motor skill acquisition, retention and transfer in a non-immersive VE in children with CP as compared to TD children; and [2] To explore the relationship between the amount of within-child variability during skill acquisition and learning outcomes
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