Post on 23-Dec-2015
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Movement and the Changing Senses
The communicative link between the human organism and the environment is in part made
possible by the senses: vision, proprioception, touch, taste,
smell, and hearing
• We rely on vision more than any other sense
• Most movement tasks are initiated by visual information
• Nonvisual modalities also influence motor development and performance
Understanding the Mechanics of Vision
• Light rays converge and meet at a focal point– The cornea and the fluids in the eye refract (bend)
the light rays
• The lens can adjust the focal point by changing shape– Relaxation of the ciliary muscles causes the lens to
flatten– Contraction of the ciliary muscles causes the lens
to become more spherical
Understanding the Mechanics of Vision
• Accommodation is the adjustment of the eye to variations in distance
• The retina contains two photoreceptors– Rods are responsible for vision in low
illumination (night vision)– Cones are responsible for color vision and
visual acuity
Understanding the Mechanics of Vision
• Macula: an oval yellow spot at the center of the retina
• Fovea: (point of best vision) is located here
• Cone cells are concentrated• There is an absence of rod cells
Retina
Understanding the Mechanics of Vision
Physical Development of the Eye
• The eye develops as an outgrowth of the forebrain– Part of the central nervous system– 6 cranial nerves govern vision
• At birth– The eye is hyperopic (light focuses behind
the retina)– The retina contains mostly rod cells
Physical Development of the Eye
• At 1 month postnatal– Cone cells appear
• At 8 months postnatal– Macula is mature
Development of Selected Visual Traits and Skilled Motor Performance
Visual Acuity
• Degree of detail that can be seen in an object
• A Snellen eye chart is used to determine visual acuity
Visual Acuity
• This Snellen eye chart is used with children in grades K-1 who may not be capable of letter recognition
Visual Acuity
• Static visual acuity– Target and performer are stationary– 20/20 vision means that you see at 20 ft
what a person with normal vision sees at 20 ft
– 20/100 means that you see at 20 ft what a person with normal vision sees at 100 ft
Age Visual Acuity
Birth 20/200 and 20/400
6 months 20/200
1 yr 20/50
4-5 yr 20/20
Visual Acuity
• Dynamic visual acuity– Ability to see the detail in moving objects– Ability of the central nervous system to
estimate an object’s direction– Ability of the ocular-motor system “to catch”
and “to hold” an object’s image on the eye’s fovea long enough to see detail
Visual Acuity and Motor Performance
• Both static and dynamic visual acuity play keys roles
• Dynamic visual acuity is highly correlated with success in– Field-goal shooting– Ball catching
Visual Acuity and Exercise
• Aerobic activities appear to improve visual acuity for up to two hours post-exercise
• Increase in acuity due to increase in blood flow and oxygenation to the eye
Visual Acuity and Aging
• Age-related eye diseases (ARED) are the leading cause of loss of visual acuity
• Conditions/diseases– Age-related macular
degeneration– Glaucoma– Cataracts– Senile miosis– Diabetic retinopathy– Presbyopia
AREDs
• Age-related macular degeneration (AMD)– Loss of central vision– Dry form
• Breakdown of light sensitive cells in the macula
• Not allowed to drive and will have trouble reading
• No problem with general movement– Wet form
• New blood vessels form behind the retina, leak, and destroy the macula
Amsler Grid
Normal
AMDVisual acuity = 20/50-20/100-total blindness
AREDs
• Glaucoma– Leading cause of loss in visual acuity and
blindness– Circulating fluids of eye are blocked
resulting in high pressure in eye– Loss of peripheral vision– Eventual loss of central vision
Age-Related Eye Diseases
AREDs
• Cataracts– Clouding of the eye’s lens– Initial symptoms include complaints of glare,
colors that seem faded, and increased need for light when reading
– Smoking, alcohol, and sun’s UV exposure increase the risk for developing cataracts
AREDs
• Senile miosis– Normal loss of light restriction to the eye
with age– Decrease in resting diameter of the pupil– Linear decline in the amount of light
reaching the retina between 30-60 years
AREDs
• Diabetic retinopathy– Complication of diabetes– Vessels in the retina may hemorrhage– Normally clear vitreous humor becomes
discolored– Detached retina can occur– Control of blood sugar slows the
progression
AREDs
• Presbyopia– Inability to focus clearly on near objects as
one ages
• Bifocal lenses can help “near” vision
Normal Prescriptio
n
Near Vision
Prescription
Age-Related Eye Diseases
Binocular Vision and Depth Perception
• Binocular vision ~ coordinated eye movements
• Strabismus ~ misaligned eyes– Common at birth, but diminishes during the
first week (moving each eye at random)
• Depth perception– A cerebral function based upon information
sent by the eye to the brain
Binocular Vision and Depth Perception
• The Visual Cliff– Note the mother
attempting to coax the infant into crossing the apparent deep (cliff) side
– Infants are capable of depth perception
– Depth perception is mature at 6 years
– Gibson & Walk’s (1960) classic experiment
Depth Perception
Held and Hein involved kittens in active and passive movement. The researchersconcluded that the active movement benefited the kittens’ development ofdepth perception. Passive movement did not.
Depth Perception
• Motion hypothesis– Individuals must interact with objects that
move in order to develop a normal repertoire of visual-spatial skills
– Movement does not need to be self-induced
Depth Perception and Sport Success
• Accurate depth perception is task specific– Tennis vs. football
• Athletes without stereo vision– The central nervous system can use
shadows, ball texture, and projectile size to perceive depth
Field of Vision
• Refers to the entire extent of the environment that can be seen without a change in fixation of the eye– Normal lateral peripheral vision is a little
greater than 90 degrees from straight ahead (180 degrees total)
– Normal vertical peripheral vision is 47 degrees above and 65 degrees below visual midline
Field of Vision
• Infant’s field of vision– At 2 months ~ peripheral vision is 15
degrees lateral of central vision– At 7 weeks ~ peripheral vision is 35 degrees
lateral of central vision
Field of Vision
• David’s 1987 experiment examining peripheral vision processing during the performance of a catching task
Field of Vision
• David’s experiment– Assessed peripheral vision in children and
adults in real-world settings– Peripheral information given to subjects
during a performance of ball-catching– Required dual processing of information– 9 year olds made significantly more
mistakes in ball catching compared to a single task performance
Aging and Depth Perception and Field of Vision
• Both disease (AMD) and anatomical facial changes may cause a loss of depth perception/field of vision with age– Change in facial structure– Senile ptosis
• Drooping of the eyelid
– Loss of fat tissue around orbital socket
Eye Dominance
• Refers to the ability of one eye to lead the other in tasks involving visual tracking and visual fixation
• Hole-in-card test
• Established between ages 3-5 years
Eye Dominance
• Unilateral dominance– Right-eyed and right-handed– Left-eyed and left-handed
• Crossed-lateral dominance– Right-eyed and left-handed– Left-eyed and right handed
Eye Dominance
• Eye dominance and motor performance– Unilaterals are superior to crossed-laterals
in several motor tasks– However, crossed-laterals may have an
advantage in baseball batting• A right handed batter with left-eye dominance• Dominant eye is closer to the pitcher
– This trait is more common among baseball players than in the general population
Tracking and Object Interception
• Tracking an object allows the performer to gain important information about the flight path of the object
• Smooth pursuit system– Matching of eye movement speed and speed of a
projectile
• Saccadic eye-movement system– Corrects differences between projectile location and
eye fixation
Tracking and Object Interception
40-52 weeks
Can track a 180 degree arc
5-6 yr Can track objects in horizontal plane
8-9 yr Can track balls that travel in arc
Tracking and Object Interception
• Bassin anticipation time
• Coincidence-anticipation– Process involving
object interception
Tracking and Object Interception
• Factors influencing success in tracking and interception– Object speed– Object predictability– Viewing time– Gender– Age
• Sport participation and video games may be a better predictor than age
• Boys perform better than girls
• Very slow and very fast moving objects result in greater performance error
Motor Development of Children with Visual Impairments
Blindness
• A definition of blindness is based upon distance vision
• Ranges from 20/200 (80% loss of vision) to total blindness
• Because visual curiosity elicits movement, the unsighted child is not visually motivated to explore the unseen world
Blindness
• Head and trunk control– Curiosity encourages
lifting head and trunk in sighted children
– Unsighted child fusses when in a prone position – parent places child on the back which does not help with head and trunk control
• Independent sitting– Occurs in sighted
children between 4 and 8 months
– An unsighted child can perform this task between 4 and 8 months if the parents have prepared the child
• Need control over head, neck, and trunk
Blindness
• Creeping– By 10 months a sighted child
can support him/herself on hands and knees to creep and explore
– An unsighted child has no enticement to explore
– Noise-making toys help the unsighted child to creep
• Independent walking– Both sighted and
unsighted children are able to walk independently at the same time
– However, this task is usually delayed in unsighted children
Blindness
• Prehension– The ability to grasp
objects – Vision is extremely
important in performing the task of prehension
– The unsighted child exhibits a delay
• Vision is important in prehension development– Child will reach for
objects – Vision helps the child
to close the hands around the object
– Errors can be corrected throughout the reaching process
Blindness
• Play – For the sighted child,
play is spontaneous– The unsighted child is
inactive and shows no desire to experiment with the environment
• Play is an important learning medium
• The unsighted child will do little more than rock or tap the fingers without help
Motor performance of sighted and visually impaired children
Nonvisual Senses
Proprioceptive System
• The ability to be aware of location and movements in space without visual references
• A factor contributing to the development of body awareness, spatial awareness, and directional awareness
Proprioceptive System
• Mechanoreceptors– Muscle spindles– Golgi tendon organs– Joint receptors– Vestibular apparatus
Proprioceptive System
• Muscle spindles– Can gauge the amount of
tension within the muscle– Senses how the muscle is
stretched– Classic “knee jerk”
• Golgi tendon organs– Monitors tension in the
muscle’s tendon– Feedback in force
development
Proprioceptive System
• Joint receptors– “Limit detectors”– Fire at a joint’s extreme range of motion
Proprioceptive System
• Vestibular apparatus– Located in the inner
ear– Rotational motion
• Semicircular canals (angular accelerometers)
– Linear acceleration• Otolith organs (utricle
and saccule)
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Auditory System
• Auditory perception– Auditory stimuli
received, selected, organized, and interpreted
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Auditory System
• Prenatal babies are capable of hearing during the last few months of pregnancy
• At birth, the ear is structurally ready, but fluid in the inner ear prevents sound wave travel for a few days
• It is believed that the sound threshold is high in newborns, thus requiring a very loud sound
Auditory System
• 0-3 months– Infant enjoys hearing parents’ voices– Responds better to Mother’s voice because of the
association to food and comfort– Recognize tone only
• 4-7 months– Recognize some components of speech– This milestone is critical in development– By month 7, babies should respond to their name– Babbling should be encouraged
Auditory System
• 8-12 months– Produce recognizable sounds– Sophisticated babbling– Can respond to simple verbal requests
• “Where’s Daddy?” Baby points to Daddy.
• 1-2 years– Can name family members and simple objects
• Hearing impairments should be recognized before age 3 years
Cutaneous System
• Tactile sensitivity (skin)• Responses to tactile stimulation
– Reflex response• Babinski reflex
– Withdrawal response• Move away from unpleasant or painful object
– Approach behaviors• Response to kisses and hugs
Cutaneous System
• First system to develop– Fetus responds to light stroking inutero
• Sensitivity to tactile stimulation is greatest in the mouth, lips, tongue of neonate– Helps child to explore world
Cutaneous System
• Romberg’s Sign disease– Varying degrees of damage to sensory
receptors• In soles of feet
– Experience difficulty in standing, especially with closed eyes
• In hands or fingers– Fine motor manipulation is a problem