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Motor, Sensory, and Perceptual Development. Motor DevelopmentSensory and Perceptual DevelopmentPerceptual-Motor Coupling. Dynamic Systems View. Seeks to explain how motor behaviors are assembled for perceiving and actingMotivation leads to new motor behavior; a convergence of Nervous system de
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1. LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT
2. Motor, Sensory, and Perceptual Development Motor Development
Sensory and Perceptual Development
Perceptual-Motor Coupling
3. Dynamic Systems View Seeks to explain how motor behaviors are assembled for perceiving and acting
Motivation leads to new motor behavior; a convergence of
Nervous system development
Body’s physical properties
Child’s motivation to reach goal
Environmental support for the skill
4. Dynamic Systems View Seeks to explain how motor behaviors are assembled for perceiving and acting
Motivation leads to new motor behavior; a convergence of
Nervous system development
Body’s physical properties
Child’s motivation to reach goal
Environmental support for the skill
5. Reflexes Built-in reactions to stimuli
Govern newborn’s movements
Genetically carried survival mechanisms
Allow adaptation to environment
Provides opportunity to learn
Some disappear (e.g.: grasping), some last throughout life (e.g.: coughing)
6. Reflexes
7. Gross Motor Skills Motor skills that involve large-muscle activities (milestones achieved)
Infancy
Development of posture
Locomotion and crawling
Learning to walk
Help of caregivers important; cultural variation exists
More skilled and mobile in second year
9. Gross Motor Skills Childhood
Improved walking, running, jumping,
climbing, learn organized sports’ skills
Positive and negative sport outcomes
Movement smoother with age
Adolescence - Skills continue to improve
Adulthood
Peak performance of most sports before 30
Biological functions decline with age
10. Guidelines for Parents and Coaches of Children in Sports
12. Fine Motor Skills Involves more finely tuned movements, such as finger dexterity
Infancy: Reaching and grasping
Size and shape of object matters
Experience affects perceptions and vision
Early Childhood: Pick up small objects
Some difficulty building towers
Age 5: hand, arm, fingers move together
13. Fine Motor Skills Childhood and adolescence
Writing and drawing skills emerge, improve
Steadier at age 7; more precise movements
By 10-12, can do quality crafts, master difficult
piece on musical instrument
Adulthood — speed may decline in middle and late adulthood, but most use compensation strategies
Older adults can still learn new motor tasks
14. Handedness Genetic inheritance proposed, unproven
Preference of using one hand over other
Right-handedness dominant in all cultures
Right hand preference in thumb-sucking begins in the womb
Head-turning preference in newborns
Preference later leads to handedness
15. Handedness, the Brain, and Cognitive Abilities 95% of right-handed primarily process speech in left hemisphere
Left handed
Are more likely to have reading problems
Show more variation
Have better spatial skills
More common among mathematicians,
musicians, artists, and architects
16. What Are Sensation and Perception?
Sensation — occurs when information contacts sensory receptors
Perception — interpretation of sensation
17. The Ecological View People directly perceive information in the world around them
Perception brings people in contact with the environment to interact with it and adapt to it
All objects have affordances; opportunities for interaction offered by objects necessary to perform activities
18. Studying Infant Perception Visual preference method — to determine if infants can distinguish between various stimuli
Habituation and Dishabituation
Habituation — decreased responsiveness to stimulus
Dishabituation — recovery of habituated response
Tracking — moving eyes and/or head to follow moving objects
Videotape equipment, high-speed computers
19. Infants’ Visual Perception
20. Perceptual Constancy
21. Vision in Childhood Improved color detection, visual expectations, controlling eye movements (for reading)
Preschoolers may be farsighted
Signs of vision problems
Rubbing eyes, blinking, squinting
Irritability at games requiring distance vision
Closing one eye, tilting head to see, thrusting
head forward to see
22. Aging Vision In Adulthood Loss of Accommodation — presbyopia
Decreased blood supply to eye — smaller visual field, increased blind spot
Slower dark adaptation, decline in motion sensitivity
Declining color vision: greens, blues, vi
Declining depth perception — problems with steps or curbs
23. Glare Vision and Aging
24. Diseases of the Eye Cataracts — thickening eye lens that causes vision to become cloudy, opaque, distorted
Glaucoma — damage to optic nerve because of pressure created by buildup of fluid in eye
Macular degeneration — involves deterioration of retina
25. Hearing
26. Hearing
27. Hearing
28. Other Senses
29. Intermodal Perception Ability to relate and integrate information about two or more sensory modalities, such as vision and hearing
Exists in newborns; sharpens with experience in first year
30. Perceptual-Motor Coupling Explores how people assemble motor behaviors for perceiving and acting
Controversial for some researchers
Babies coordinate movements with perceptual information to maintain balance, reach for objects, etc.
Driving a car is coupling; declines in late adulthood
31. The End