The maturation of motor dexterity: or why Johnny can't go any faster |
Author(s):
,Journal/Book: Dev Med Child Neurol. 1996; 38: 244-54.
Abstract: The speed of alternating movements at the ankle, metacarpophalangeal and wrist joints in 11 healthy children and 13 adults doubled between age 3 and 11 years, despite a 32-fold increase in limb-segment inertia produced by the doubling in limb length over the same period. The data for the children showed little or no practice effect. The speeds for the adults, though faster than those for the children, were more widely dispersed, indicating the possibility that training might increase the speed of the slowest adult. The findings are consistent with a previous report demonstrating a parallel increase in the speed of calf muscles over the first 10 years of life and it is inferred that the increase in dexterity at the wrist and metacarpophalangeal joints also depends on an increase in muscle speed with age. Muscle maturation may impose a rate-limiting envelope for all motor tasks which is particularly evident in rapidly alternating movements. These findings have implications for training in sport and music and for the understanding of motor delay, clumsiness and speech difficulties.
Keyword(s): Adult. Age Factors. Child. Child, Preschool. Comparative Study. Female. Human. Laterality/physiology. Leg/anatomy & histology/physiology. Male. Motor Skills/physiology. Relaxation. Support, Non-U.S. Gov't. Time Factors
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