Verbal and Visual Instruction in Motor Skill Acquisition for Persons With and Without Down Syndrome

B. K. Maraj, Li Li, R. Hillman, J. J. Jeansonne, S. D. R. Ringenbach

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study examined motor learning in persons with Down syndrome (DS), persons with undifferentiated developmental disabilities (UnDD), and persons without disabilities (ND). Participants were instructed (either by verbal instruction or visual demonstration) to move a cursor to three items displayed on a computer screen. Results indicated that the ND group had superior performances to the other two groups for both instruction conditions. Participants with DS performed the task with both longer response and movement times when instructed verbally. In a transfer condition, results revealed the UnDD group displayed poor transfer, while participants with DS showed positive transfer from visual to verbal protocols. These results provide some evidence that persons with DS may be able to consolidate visual information to facilitate verbal-motor learning.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalAdapted Physical Activity Quarterly
Volume20
StatePublished - 2003

Disciplines

  • Kinesiology

Keywords

  • Down Syndrome
  • Motor skill acquisition
  • Persons
  • Verbal
  • Visual instruction

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Verbal and Visual Instruction in Motor Skill Acquisition for Persons With and Without Down Syndrome'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this