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1.
Front Public Health ; 12: 1437473, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39228846

ABSTRACT

Objectives: This study aimed to develop an efficient tool for assessing children's fundamental motor skills, the "Track style" Children's Fundamental Movement Skills Test (TCFMST), based on theories of motor development integrated with Chinese cultural context and physical education teaching situations. Methods: Starting from a literature analysis, the study selected items from existing fundamental movement skill (FMS) assessments, textbooks, physical education and health standards, and children's movement guidelines to construct a pool of test items. Subsequently, the items were screened and optimized using the Delphi method. Finally, the feasibility, discrimination, difficulty, reliability, and validity of the constructed test were examined using testing methods. Results: The TCFMST includes three dimensions: locomotive skills, body control skills, and manipulative skills, with a total of 10 items. The difficulty and discrimination of each item are appropriate; the correlation coefficients for retest reliability range from 0.789 to 0.943 (p < 0.01). The results of exploratory factor analysis indicate that the common factors align with the hypothesized three dimensions, indicating good structural validity of the test. The concurrent validity results show a correlation coefficient of -0.510 (p < 0.01) between the TCFMST and the total score of TGMD-3, indicating a moderate correlation between the two tests. Conclusion: The TCFMST developed in this study has good difficulty, discrimination, reliability, and validity. It also features strong operability, a short duration, and high interest. It can serve as an important tool for monitoring children's fundamental motor skill levels.


Subject(s)
Motor Skills , Humans , Motor Skills/physiology , Child , Reproducibility of Results , Female , Male , Delphi Technique , China , Child Development/physiology
2.
Dev Psychobiol ; 66(7): e22545, 2024 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39236225

ABSTRACT

Temperamental characteristics and emerging cognitive control are meaningful predictors of children's development of adaptive and maladaptive social behaviors during the preschool period. However, knowledge of the interplay of these pathways, when examined concurrently to highlight their individual contributions, is limited. Using a cross-sectional sample of 3-year-old children, we examined parent-reported discrete traits of negative (anger, fear, sadness, and shyness) and positive (low- and high-intensity pleasure) temperamental reactivity as predictors of children's prosociality and physical aggression. Further, we tested whether the effects of discrete temperament were moderated by cognitive control, as indexed by the N2 event-related potential, during a go/no-go task. Analyses focus on a subsample of children with an observable N2 (n = 66). When controlling for other relative temperament traits, several significant main effects emerged. Moreover, at low cognitive control (smaller N2), fear was negatively associated with aggression, whereas at high cognitive control, sadness was positively associated with aggression. Heightened anger was linked to reduced prosocial behavior when cognitive control was low but linked to greater prosocial behavior when cognitive control was high. The results highlight that discrete temperament traits predict individual differences in child outcomes but that associations depend on concurrent levels of cognitive control.


Subject(s)
Aggression , Child Behavior , Social Behavior , Temperament , Humans , Temperament/physiology , Child, Preschool , Male , Female , Child Behavior/physiology , Aggression/physiology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Executive Function/physiology , Fear/physiology , Child Development/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Anger/physiology , Shyness
3.
Bol Med Hosp Infant Mex ; 81(4): 217-224, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39236669

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Some cancer survivors experience difficulties with concentration, attention, and memory; however, there are no studies on neurodevelopment in patients under 5 years of age who are undergoing cancer treatment. Our aim was to evaluate neurodevelopment in cancer patients under 5 years of age using the Early Development Instrument (EDI) test, considering factors such as nutritional status, type of cancer, and treatment effect. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted from February 2018 to March 2019. Patients with cancer diagnoses outside the central nervous system in any phase of cancer treatment were included. RESULTS: A total of 45 patients were included. Regarding fine motor skills, 28% of patients with retinoblastoma and 23% of patients with leukemia or lymphoma had a risk of developmental delay compared to 0% of patients with solid tumors (p = 0.025). The final results showed that 19 (42.2%) patients had normal neurodevelopment (gray), 7 (15.5%) had a delay in neurodevelopment (light gray), and 19 (42.2%) had a risk of developmental delay (black). Regarding developmental delay, 52% of patients in the leukemia and lymphoma group, 71% in the retinoblastoma group, and 23% in the solid tumor group presented developmental delay (p = 0.06). CONCLUSIONS: The risk of delay and lag in neurodevelopment is common in cancer patients under 5 years of age undergoing treatment. However, more studies are required to evaluate the effect of treatment on this group of patients as it may be affected by various factors.


INTRODUCCIÓN: En algunos pacientes supervivientes de cáncer se presentan dificultades de concentración, atención y memoria, sin embargo no hay estudios en relación al neurodesarrollo en pacientes menores de 5 años que se encuentran en tratamiento oncológico. Por lo que el objetivo fue valorar el neurodesarrollo en pacientes con cáncer durante el tratamiento oncológico mediante la prueba EDI tomando en cuenta diversos factores como su estado nutricional, tipo de cancer, y el efecto del tratamiento. MÉTODOS: Se realizó un estudio transversal, de febrero de 2018 a marzo de 2019. Se incluyeron pacientes mayores de 1 año y menores de 5 años con diagnóstico de cáncer fuera del sistema nervioso central, en tratamiento oncológico. RESULTADOS: Se incluyeron 45 pacientes. En el área motor fina el 28% de los pacientes con retinoblastoma y 23% con leucemias y linfomas se encontraron en rojo (retraso) en comparación con 0% de los pacientes con tumores sólidos (p = 0.025). En el resultado global se encontró que 19 (42.2%) pacientes tuvieron neurodesarrollo normal (gris), 7 (15.5%) rezago en el neurodesarrollo (gris claro) y 19 (42.2%) con riesgo de retraso en el desarrollo (negro). De los pacientes que presentaron riesgo de retraso el 52% fueron del grupo de leucemias y linfomas, el 71% en el grupo de retinoblastoma y el 23% del grupo de tumores sólidos (p = 0.06). CONCLUSIONES: La presencia de riesgo de retraso y rezago en el neurodesarrollo es frecuente en menores de 5 años con diagnóstico de cáncer. Se requieren más estudios, para evaluar el efecto del tratamiento en este grupo de pacientes, ya que pueden influir diversos factores.


Subject(s)
Developmental Disabilities , Neoplasms , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Child, Preschool , Male , Female , Infant , Developmental Disabilities/etiology , Developmental Disabilities/epidemiology , Neurodevelopmental Disorders/epidemiology , Neurodevelopmental Disorders/etiology , Retinoblastoma , Nutritional Status , Child Development/physiology , Cancer Survivors/statistics & numerical data , Risk Factors
4.
Dev Psychobiol ; 66(7): e22542, 2024 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39237483

ABSTRACT

Temperament is a key predictor of human mental health and cognitive and emotional development. Although human fear behavior is reportedly associated with gut microbiome in infancy, infant gut microbiota changes dramatically during the first 5 years, when the diversity and composition of gut microbiome are established. This period is crucial for the development of the prefrontal cortex, which is involved in emotion regulation. Therefore, this study investigated the relationship between temperament and gut microbiota in 284 preschool children aged 3-4 years. Child temperament was assessed by maternal reports of the Children's Behavior Questionnaire. Gut microbiota (alpha/beta diversity and genera abundance) was evaluated using 16S rRNA sequencing of stool samples. A low abundance of anti-inflammatory bacteria (e.g., Faecalibacterium) and a high abundance of pro-inflammatory bacteria (e.g., Eggerthella, Flavonifractor) were associated with higher negative emotionality and stress response (i.e., negative affectivity, ß = -0.17, p = 0.004) and lower positive emotionality and reward-seeking (i.e., surgency/extraversion, ß = 0.15, p = 0.013). Additionally, gut microbiota diversity was associated with speed of response initiation (i.e., impulsivity, a specific aspect of surgency/extraversion, ß = 0.16, p = 0.008). This study provides insight into the biological mechanisms of temperament and takes important steps toward identifying predictive markers of psychological/emotional risk.


Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Temperament , Humans , Gastrointestinal Microbiome/physiology , Temperament/physiology , Male , Female , Child, Preschool , Child Behavior/physiology , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S , Child Development/physiology , Emotions/physiology
5.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 7932, 2024 Sep 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39256419

ABSTRACT

Environmental influences on brain structure and function during early development have been well-characterized, but whether early environments are associated with the pace of brain development is not clear. In pre-registered analyses, we use flexible non-linear models to test the theory that prenatal disadvantage is associated with differences in trajectories of intrinsic brain network development from birth to three years (n = 261). Prenatal disadvantage was assessed using a latent factor of socioeconomic disadvantage that included measures of mother's income-to-needs ratio, educational attainment, area deprivation index, insurance status, and nutrition. We find that prenatal disadvantage is associated with developmental increases in cortical network segregation, with neonates and toddlers with greater exposure to prenatal disadvantage showing a steeper increase in cortical network segregation with age, consistent with accelerated network development. Associations between prenatal disadvantage and cortical network segregation occur at the local scale and conform to a sensorimotor-association hierarchy of cortical organization. Disadvantage-associated differences in cortical network segregation are associated with language abilities at two years, such that lower segregation is associated with improved language abilities. These results shed light on associations between the early environment and trajectories of cortical development.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex , Humans , Female , Child, Preschool , Infant , Pregnancy , Male , Cerebral Cortex/growth & development , Infant, Newborn , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects , Child Development/physiology , Nerve Net/growth & development , Socioeconomic Factors , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Brain/growth & development
6.
J Pak Med Assoc ; 74(5 (Supple-5)): S8-S12, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39221789

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess the emotional development of school-aged children. METHODS: The descriptive, analytical study was carried out on children of elementary schools in the Semarang City area in January 2022. Included were children aged 6-12 years with active elementary school status. Data was collected using the 25-item Strength and Difficulties Rutter Questionnaire. The questionnaire was filled manually by the subject along with the guardian or teacher. Data was analysed using SPSS 20. RESULTS: Of the 326 children, 174(53.21%) were girls and 153(46.79%) were boys. Overall, 171(52.3%) subjects were aged <10 years, while 156(47.7%) were aged 10-12 years. There were 295(90.21%) children with normal prosocial behaviour, 206(63%) with normal emotional status, 264(80.73%) with normal conduct, 133(40.67%) with normal hyperactivity level, and 91(27.83%) with normal equation with peers. CONCLUSIONS: Different domains of the Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire showed varying degrees of pro-social behaviour, emotional status, conduct, hyperactivity level and peer interaction among the subjects.


Subject(s)
Emotions , Mental Health , Humans , Child , Female , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires , Child Development/physiology , Social Behavior , Pakistan , Peer Group , Child Behavior/psychology
7.
PLoS One ; 19(9): e0310016, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39240865

ABSTRACT

Cognitive and social-emotional development in the first three years of life is associated with later skills. However, little is known about the paths of developmental delays in both cognitive and social-emotional skills before age 3 or to what extent these paths predict later developmental outcomes. The aim of this study is to examine the associations between the different paths of developmental delays in both cognitive and social-emotional skills of children before age 3 and the levels of development of the children when they are preschool age. Using a longitudinal data collected at three time points from 1245 children and their caregivers in rural China, we identified four different paths of developmental delays in cognitive and social-emotional before age 3 and examined how these paths are associated with different levels of developmental outcomes at preschool age. We used a non-parametric standardization approach and an ordinary least squares model to perform our analyses. Findings show that rates of developmental delays in either cognitive or social-emotional domain or both domains are high at all different time points, ranging from 20% to 55% for cognitive delays and 42% to 61% for social-emotional delays. Over half of children experienced deteriorating levels of either cognitive or social-emotional development before age 3. A large share of children was found to be persistently delayed in either domain. Only a small share of children raised their levels of development in either domain before age 3. In addition, we identified certain socioeconomic status of the family that are associated with never or deteriorating path of child developmental delays. More importantly, we revealed that different paths of developmental delays before age 3 have predictive power on different levels of developmental outcomes at preschool age. Our results suggest that actions are needed at the earliest times to improve child development when children are still infants or toddlers.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Cognition , Developmental Disabilities , Emotions , Rural Population , Humans , Child, Preschool , China , Female , Male , Cognition/physiology , Child Development/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Developmental Disabilities/epidemiology , Developmental Disabilities/psychology , Infant , Longitudinal Studies , Social Skills
8.
J Dev Orig Health Dis ; 15: e13, 2024 Sep 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39248603

ABSTRACT

Early-life family meal participation has been associated with several aspects of nutritional health, but longitudinal associations with linear growth have not yet been investigated. The aim of this study was to investigate whether family meal participation at 12 months of age associates with anthropometric measures 3 years later. We used follow-up data from children born to mothers in the Norwegian Fit for Delivery trial (NFFD) and included 368 first-borns with dietary and anthropometric data at 12 months and 4 years of age. We treated the sample as a cohort and conducted subgroup analyses by randomization status. A family meal participation score was used as exposure, and weight, height, and body mass index (BMI) as outcomes in crude and multivariable linear regression models adjusted for maternal education, randomization status, and child sex.Higher family meal participation score at 12 months was positively associated with length at 12 months (B = 0.198, 95% CI 0.028, 0.367, p = 0.022) and 4 years (B = 0.283, 95% CI 0.011, 0.555, p = 0.042) in multivariable models. After additional adjustment for maternal height the associations attenuated and were no longer significant. An inverse association with BMI at 4 years of age was observed in children born to mothers that had been exposed to the NFFD intervention (B = -0.144, 95% CI -0.275, -0.014, p = 0.030), but attenuated after adjustment for maternal BMI.The longitudinal association observed between early family meal participation and child height was largely explained by maternal height. The relationship with BMI differed according to maternal participation in a lifestyle intervention trial during pregnancy.


Subject(s)
Body Mass Index , Meals , Humans , Female , Male , Child, Preschool , Infant , Anthropometry/methods , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Norway , Child Development/physiology , Adult , Family
9.
Cogn Sci ; 48(9): e13492, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39226225

ABSTRACT

Early number skills represent critical milestones in children's cognitive development and are shaped over years of interacting with quantities and numerals in various contexts. Several connectionist computational models have attempted to emulate how certain number concepts may be learned, represented, and processed in the brain. However, these models mainly used highly simplified inputs and focused on limited tasks. We expand on previous work in two directions: First, we train a model end-to-end on video demonstrations in a synthetic environment with multimodal visual and language inputs. Second, we use a more holistic dataset of 35 tasks, covering enumeration, set comparisons, symbolic digits, and seriation. The order in which the model acquires tasks reflects input length and variability, and the resulting trajectories mostly fit with findings from educational psychology. The trained model also displays symbolic and non-symbolic size and distance effects. Using techniques from interpretability research, we investigate how our attention-based model integrates cross-modal representations and binds them into context-specific associative networks to solve different tasks. We compare models trained with and without symbolic inputs and find that the purely non-symbolic model employs more processing-intensive strategies to determine set size.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Humans , Cognition/physiology , Child Development/physiology , Child , Language , Learning , Mathematics , Child, Preschool , Mathematical Concepts
10.
Aggress Behav ; 50(5): e22174, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39229968

ABSTRACT

Recent theories of socio-moral development assume that humans evolved a capacity to evaluate others' social actions in different kinds of interactions. Prior infant studies found both reaching and visual preferences for the prosocial over the antisocial agents. However, whether the attribution of either positive or negative valence to agents' actions involved in an aggressive chasing interaction can be inferred by both reaching behaviors and visual attention deployment (i.e., disengagement of visual attention) is still an open question. Here we presented 7-month-old infants (N = 92) with events displaying an aggressive chasing interaction. By using preferential reaching and an attentional task (i.e., overlap paradigm), we assessed whether and how infants evaluate aggressive chasing interactions. The results demonstrated that young infants prefer to reach the victim over the aggressor, but neither agent affects visual attention. Moreover, such reaching preferences emerged only when dynamic cues and emotional face-like features were congruent with agents' social roles. Overall, these findings suggested that infants' evaluations of aggressive interactions are based on infants' sensitivity to some kinematic cues that characterized agents' actions and, especially, to the congruency between such motions and the face-like emotional expressions of the agents.


Subject(s)
Aggression , Attention , Social Perception , Humans , Infant , Male , Female , Aggression/psychology , Attention/physiology , Infant Behavior/physiology , Infant Behavior/psychology , Social Interaction , Facial Expression , Child Development/physiology
11.
Neuroimage ; 298: 120795, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39153522

ABSTRACT

Deception is an essential part of children's moral development. Previous developmental studies have shown that children start to deceive at the age of 3 years, and as age increased to 5 years, almost all children were able to deceive for their own benefit. Although behavioral studies have indicated that the emergence and development of deception are related to cognitive abilities, their neural correlates remain poorly understood. Therefore, the present study examined the neural correlates underlying deception in preschool-aged children (N = 89, 44 % boys, age 3.13 to 5.96 years, Han Chinese) using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. A modified hide-and-seek paradigm was applied to elicit deceptive and truth-telling behaviors. The results showed that activation of bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was positively associated with the tendency to deceive an opponent in a competitive game in the 3-year-olds. In addition, 3-year-olds who showed a high tendency to deceive showed the same brain activation in the frontopolar area as 5-year-olds did when engaged in deception, whereas no such effect was found in 3-year-olds who never engaged in deception. These findings underscore the link between preschoolers' deception and prefrontal cortex function.


Subject(s)
Deception , Prefrontal Cortex , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared , Humans , Male , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared/methods , Child, Preschool , Female , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/diagnostic imaging , Brain Mapping/methods , Child Development/physiology
12.
Gait Posture ; 113: 477-489, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39126960

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Sensitive measures to predict neuromotor outcomes from data collected early in infancy are lacking. Measures derived from the recordings of infant movement using wearable sensors may be a useful new technique. METHODS: We collected full-day leg movement of 41 infants in rural Guatemala across 3 visits between birth and 6 months of age using wearable sensors. Average leg movement rate and fuzzy entropy, a measure to describe the complexity of signals, of the leg movements' peak acceleration time series and the time series itself were derived. We tested the three measures for the predictability of infants' developmental outcome, Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development III motor, language, or cognitive composite score assessed at 12 months of age. We performed quantile regressions with clustered standard errors, accounting for the multiple visits for each infant. RESULTS: Fuzzy entropy was associated with the motor composite score at the 0.5 quantiles; this association was not found for the other two measures. Also, no leg movement characteristic was associated with language or cognitive composite scores. CONCLUSION: We propose that the entropy of leg movement associated peak accelerations calculated from the wearable sensor data collected for a full-day can be considered as one predictor for infants' motor developmental outcome assessed with Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development III at 12 months of age.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Rural Population , Wearable Electronic Devices , Humans , Guatemala , Infant , Female , Male , Child Development/physiology , Leg/physiology , Infant, Newborn , Movement/physiology , Accelerometry/instrumentation , Language Development
13.
Psychol Rev ; 131(4): 966-992, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39088004

ABSTRACT

Cognitive scientists have become increasingly interested in understanding how natural minds represent and reason about possible ways the world could be. However, there is currently little agreement on how to understand this remarkable capacity for modal thought. We argue that the capacity for modal thought is built from a set of relatively simple component parts, centrally involving an ability to consider possible extensions of a part of the actual world. Natural minds can productively combine this ability with a range of other capacities, eventually allowing for the observed suite of increasingly more sophisticated ways of modal reasoning. We demonstrate how our (de)compositional account is supported by both the trajectory of children's developing capacity for reasoning about possible ways the world could be and by what we know about how such modal thought is expressed within and across natural languages. Our approach makes new predictions about which kinds of capacities are required by which kinds of experimental tasks and, as a result, contributes to settling currently open theoretical questions about the development of modal thought and the acquisition of modal vocabulary in children. Our work also provides a more systematic way of understanding possible variation in modal thought and talk, and, more generally, paves the way toward a unified theory that will ultimately allow researchers across disciplines to relate their findings to each other within a framework of shared assumptions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Child Development , Thinking , Humans , Thinking/physiology , Child Development/physiology , Child , Language Development
14.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 379(1911): 20230154, 2024 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39155719

ABSTRACT

A fundamental component of human cognition is the ability to intuitively reason about behaviours of objects and systems in the physical world without resorting to explicit scientific knowledge. This skill was traditionally considered a symbolic process. However, in the last decades, there has been a shift towards ideas of embodiment, suggesting that accessing physical knowledge and predicting physical outcomes is grounded in bodily interactions with the environment. Infants and children, who learn mainly through their embodied experiences, serve as a model to probe the link between reasoning and physical concepts. Here, we tested school-aged children (5- to 15-year-olds) in online reasoning games that involve different physical action concepts such as supporting, launching and clearing. We assessed changes in children's performance and strategies over development and their relationships with the different action concepts. Children reasoned more accurately in problems that involved supporting actions compared to launching or clearing actions. Moreover, when children failed, they were more strategic in subsequent attempts when problems involved support rather than launching or clearing. Children improved with age, but improvements differed across action concepts. Our findings suggest that accessing physical knowledge and predicting physical events are affected by action concepts, and those effects change over development. This article is part of the theme issue 'Minds in movement: embodied cognition in the age of artificial intelligence'.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Cognition , Humans , Child , Adolescent , Male , Female , Child, Preschool , Child Development/physiology , Concept Formation , Thinking/physiology , Problem Solving
15.
Child Care Health Dev ; 50(5): e13316, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39107675

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Physical literacy is a concept used to describe the combined physical, affective and cognitive capacities facilitating an active lifestyle. Physical activity participation is essential for children living with chronic medical conditions, but knowledge of physical literacy among this group is scarce. METHODS: An explanatory, sequential mixed methods design was used to comprehensively describe the physical literacies of children with chronic medical conditions (CMCs). Participants were recruited from paediatric cardiology, respirology/cystic fibrosis, neurology, haematology and endocrinology outpatient clinics. All participants completed the Canadian Assessment of Physical Literacy (2nd Edition), and those with higher and lower scores were invited to a semi-structured interview. A deductive-inductive thematic analysis was applied using Margaret Whitehead's conceptualization of physical literacy. RESULTS: Using normative strata, 80.0% of the 99 children assessed (mean age = 9.97 ± 1.3 years, 48% girls) were considered beginning or progressing in their overall physical literacy (mean score = 56.5 ± 13.8/100). Meanwhile, physical literacy informed participants' approach to new, active experiences and may have contributed to a strong sense of self. There was a significant difference between endocrinology and haematology patients on total physical literacy score (p = 0.03) but not domain scores. Participants scored high on motivation/confidence (mean = 22.9 ± 5.0/30) but obtained low physical competence (mean = 11.8 ± 5.6/30) and daily behaviour scores (n = 72, mean = 15.5 ± 7.1/30). Main themes represent salient experiences of children with CMCs within the domains of physical literacy, including their need to evaluate active contexts, self-regulate activity intensity and manage physical limitations. CONCLUSIONS: Children with CMCs can achieve recommended levels of physical literacy without meeting normative standards for physical competence. Participants would benefit from a physical literacy intervention that targets the development of bodily self-regulation skills and risk evaluation in active settings.


Subject(s)
Exercise , Health Literacy , Humans , Child , Female , Male , Chronic Disease , Exercise/psychology , Canada , Child Development/physiology , Qualitative Research
16.
Dev Psychobiol ; 66(6): e22534, 2024 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39128886

ABSTRACT

Adversity within low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) poses severe threats to neurocognitive development, which can be partially mitigated by high-quality early family experiences. Specifically, maternal scaffolding and home stimulation can buffer cognitive development in LMIC, possibly by protecting underlying neural functioning. However, the association between family experiences and neural activity remains largely unexplored in LMIC contexts. This study explored the relation of early family experiences to later cognitive skills and absolute gamma power (21-45 Hz), a neural marker linked to higher-order cognitive skills. Drawing data from the PEDS trial, a longitudinal study in rural Pakistan, we examined maternal scaffolding at 24 months and home stimulation quality at 18 months as predictors of verbal IQ, executive functions, and absolute gamma at 48 months for 105 mother-child dyads (52 girls). Maternal scaffolding interacted with gender to predict absolute gamma power, such that higher maternal scaffolding was related to higher gamma more strongly for girls. Maternal scaffolding also interacted with absolute gamma to predict executive functions, such that higher gamma was related to better executive functions only when maternal scaffolding was average to high. Individual differences in early family experiences may partially buffer the neural underpinnings of cognitive skills from adversity in LMIC.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Executive Function , Mother-Child Relations , Rural Population , Humans , Female , Male , Pakistan , Longitudinal Studies , Child Development/physiology , Child, Preschool , Executive Function/physiology , Sex Factors , Adult , Electroencephalography
17.
Neuroscience ; 558: 114-121, 2024 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39168171

ABSTRACT

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder. Early diagnosis in the critical period is important for ASD children. Recent studies of neurodevelopmental behavioral features and joint attention in high-risk infants showed there are some special cues which can distinguish ASD from typical development infant. But the findings of high-risk population may not be applicable to the general population. It is necessary to "analogically" study the potential warning traits of ASD in infancy in the general population. We did a nested case-control study from June 2019 to November 2022 in Tianjin, China, including 76 general infants whom completed the neurodevelopmental evaluation, the Checklist for Autism in Toddlers-23 (CHAT-23) screening, and eye tracking task. Social behavior quotient in infancy was negatively correlated to CHAT-23 total scores in toddlerhood. Social behavior quotient in infancy was positively correlated to initiating joint attention in toddlerhood. Regression model showed that high fine motor scale and social behaviour scale quotient in infancy were associated with an decreased risk of the total score of CHAT-23 ≥ 2 in toddlerhood. The Receiver operating characteristic curve showed the social behaviour in infancy alone and the combination of fine motor and social behaviour in infancy contributed to auxiliary diagnosis of higher level of autistic traits in toddlerhood. These findings suggest that Impaired development of fine motor and social behavior in infancy are potential warning features of high autistic traits in general population.


Subject(s)
Autism Spectrum Disorder , Social Skills , Humans , Male , Female , Infant , Autism Spectrum Disorder/diagnosis , Autism Spectrum Disorder/physiopathology , Child, Preschool , Case-Control Studies , Child Development/physiology , Motor Skills/physiology , Social Behavior
18.
J Affect Disord ; 365: 332-340, 2024 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39178959

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The interconnected effects of maternal perinatal depression and the early mother-infant relational quality on children's executive function development are crucial yet understudied. This study addresses this gap, focusing on how perinatal depressive symptoms and emotional availability at 6 months predict child executive function performance at age four, with an emphasis on the moderating role of emotional availability. METHOD: This study included 282 mother-infant pairs recruited from the Mercy Pregnancy and Emotional Wellbeing Study, utilising repeated Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale measurement over the perinatal period, Emotional Availability Scales, and child executive function assessments (Shape School, NEPSY-II, Preschool Age Psychiatric Assessment, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity scale, inattentive subscale). Latent growth curve analysis incorporated controls for socioeconomic status and maternal cognitive abilities, and moderation effects were examined through multiplicative interaction terms. RESULTS: We found that emotional availability influences children's executive function, specifically switching, motor inhibition, and inattentive symptoms, irrespective of maternal depressive symptom changes. This effect is further nuanced by emotional availability's moderating role in the association between depressive symptom change and switching. LIMITATIONS: The study's limitations include a relatively small sample size for moderation analysis and the exclusion of paternal influences. CONCLUSION: This study is a significant step in understanding the profound influence of maternal emotional availability in infancy on child executive function development, offering new avenues for research and, if replicated, a foundation for innovative intervention approaches.


Subject(s)
Depression , Emotions , Executive Function , Mother-Child Relations , Mothers , Humans , Executive Function/physiology , Female , Child, Preschool , Male , Emotions/physiology , Pregnancy , Mothers/psychology , Adult , Depression/psychology , Infant , Depression, Postpartum/psychology , Child Development/physiology
19.
Cognition ; 252: 105913, 2024 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39197250

ABSTRACT

Inhibition control is an essential executive function during children's development, underpinning self-regulation and the acquisition of social and language abilities. This executive function is intensely engaged in music training while learning an instrument, a complex multisensory task requiring monitoring motor performance and auditory stream prioritization. This novel meta-analysis examined music-based training on inhibition control in children. Records from 1980 to 2023 yielded 22 longitudinal studies with controls (N = 1734), including 8 RCTs and 14 others. A random-effects meta-analysis showed that music training improved inhibition control (moderate-to-large effect size) in the RCTs and the superset of twenty-two longitudinal studies (small-to-moderate effect size). Music training plays a privileged role compared to other activities (sports, visual arts, drama) in improving children's executive functioning, with a particular effect on inhibition control. We recommend music training for complementing education and as a clinical tool focusing on inhibition control remediation (e.g., in autism and ADHD).


Subject(s)
Executive Function , Inhibition, Psychological , Music , Humans , Executive Function/physiology , Child , Music Therapy , Child Development/physiology
20.
Am J Intellect Dev Disabil ; 129(5): 387-404, 2024 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39197852

ABSTRACT

Motivation is a key factor for child development, but very few studies have examined child and family predictors of both child task and perceived motivation. Thus, the three aims of this 6-month longitudinal study in preschoolers with global developmental delays (GDD) were to explore: 1) differences between task and perceived motivation in cognitive domain; 2) differences among three domains of perceived motivation: cognitive, gross motor, and social; and 3) early child and family predictors of cognitive task motivation and the three domains of perceived motivation 6 months later. Results indicated that preschoolers with GDD showed higher cognitive task motivation than cognitive perceived motivation, and lower perceived cognitive motivation than the other two perceived motivation domains. Different child and family factors predicted cognitive task motivation and the three domains of perceived motivation. Practitioners should educate caregivers on how to observe children's motivation to enhance children's active participation.


Subject(s)
Developmental Disabilities , Motivation , Humans , Motivation/physiology , Developmental Disabilities/psychology , Child, Preschool , Male , Female , Longitudinal Studies , Child Development/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Family/psychology , Motor Skills/physiology , Infant
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