Abstract

Background: Previous research has found that language and motor skills are closely interrelated developmental areas. This observation has led to questions about the specificity of these domains, and the nature of the associations. In this study, we investigated the longitudinal relationship between language and gross and fine motor performance from 3 to 5 years of age. Methods: We tested the prediction across and within developmental domains using cross-lagged panel models. In addition, estimates of specificity for each domain were calculated. Analyses were performed using parental reports in a sample of 11 999 children from a prospective population study. Results: Structural equation modelling revealed unique positive predictions from early language performance to later fine and gross motor skills. Neither gross nor fine early motor skills uniquely predicted later language performance. Both language and motor skills were stable from 3 to 5 years of age. Motor skills were more stable in boys than in girls. Boys had lower scores than girls on fine motor performance, but gender differences in cross-lagged associations between language and motor performance were non-significant. The variance specific to language performance decreased from 68% to 46% in relation to fine motor skills and from 61% to 46% in relation to gross motor skills from 3 to 5 years of age. Conclusion: From 3 to 5 years of age the stability within each developmental area is high, and unique prediction from one domain to the other is weak. These results implicate stable and correlated developmental pathways at this age.

Highlights

  • Previous research has found that language and motor skills are closely interrelated developmental areas

  • The results showed that whereas both skills were quite stable across age, early motor performance was an strong predictor of later language performance as early language performance was

  • In the present study we investigate the co-occurrence, stability, and change in language and gross and fine motor performance from 3 to 5 years of age in a large, prospective longitudinal population study

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Summary

Introduction

Previous research has found that language and motor skills are closely interrelated developmental areas This observation has led to questions about the specificity of these domains, and the nature of the associations. Theories of motor cognition, i.e. the notion that cognition is embedded in actions, suggest that perception and action share common computational codes and underlying neural architectures. This idea has been further developed in the study of mirror-neurons. Theories of embodied cognition argue that motor resonance enhances language comprehension (Glenberg and Kaschak 2002; Fischer and Zwaan 2008) These theories suggest that a broader developmental focus should be employed both in research and in clinical practice when investigating language and motor development

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