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Effects of skill level and task difficulty on various parameters of motor performanceSaint-Aubin, Pierre January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of an audience on various parameters of motor learning /Stark, Judy Katalin. January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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An Evaluation of the Effect of a Specific Perceptual Training Program on Classroom Skills in KindergartenCook, Grace H. 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the evaluation was to test effectiveness of a visual, visual-motor, and auditory perceptual skills training program devised by Dr. Jerome Rosner, and to confirm or deny application of this training to improved classroom skills. Subjects were 38 kindergarten children, 20 in the Contrast Group, and 18 in the Experimental Group. Both groups received the same training in the basic curriculum of readiness skills. The Experimental Group also received training in the Visual Analysis and Auditory Analysis Skills programs. Pretests and posttests were administered, tabulated, and analyzed. Differences in raw score means were sufficient to indicate more than a chance factor and all tests demonstrated a plus factor for children in the Experimental Group.
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THE EMERGENCE OF CHILDREN'S SPATIAL ABILITIES: A QUESTION OF GEOMETRIC PRECISION.GLIDER, PEGGY. January 1986 (has links)
This research investigated the precision with which spatial information can be maintained in memory and reproduced as well as factors which may effect these emerging abilities. To study this, ten males and ten females in each of first, third, fifth, and seventh grades participated in three drawing tasks under two conditions (match and recall). The tasks involved the presentation of a 4" straight line or a 2" x 2" right angle drawn on an 8" white disc. Subjects were asked to draw a line exactly the same size and in the same place (static), after an imagined rotation, or after an imagined bending or unbending of the line (transformation) on an 1" white disc. Several mixed design analyses of variance with repeated measures on the task variables were run. First graders made significantly more errors than all other subjects. Third and fifth graders differed little and both performed significantly less accurately than seventh graders. Performance on the rotation task and the transformation task did not differ significantly with performance on both yielding more error than performance on the static task. The match condition generally proved easier than the recall condition, straight lines led to less error than bent lines, and orientation information was more accurately preserved than metric information. The requirements of the task, i.e., no change, change in position, or a change in form, interacted with both the stimulus type and the type of information preserved. Grade level also interacted significantly with task and stimulus type. When determining how spatial abilities emerge and the accuracy with which spatial information can be dealt, task demands, stimulus characteristics, and type of information being measured must be considered along with the developmental changes.
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Toward a broader appreciation of human motion in education.Dodd, Graham Douglas, mikewood@deakin.edu.au January 2003 (has links)
Motion is a fundamental activity for the healthy functioning human organism. Its importance, however, is increasingly de-valued in Western cultures as they speed toward adopting technologies and virtual experiences as adjuncts to, and even replacements for7 traditional educational structures and processes that involve physical activity. Organised and reflective experience of human motion is becoming increasingly marginalised in teaching methodologies and learning programs in educational institutions at all levels around the globe.
This inquiry sets out to gain a greater understanding of why people and human motion become disconnected, particularly during periods of formal education. A central question and two sub-questions form the basis of the inquiry. The central question asks why human motion is not valued and more utilised in education. In particular, why do learning areas that directly represent involvement with human motion, such as physical education, continually struggle in education programs. It directs the investigation to focus on the causes rather than the symptoms of the disuse and devaluation of human motion in Australian education. The two sub-questions split the praxis of the study. The first seeks to understand how the causes of devaluation work in the educational context lo affect the lack of acknowledgement; and the second considers ways to counter the disuse of human movement in education programs.
To address these questions, the research focuses on rebutting the notion of a mind-body dualism. Rather, it seeks to better understand how humans learn and function as monists - integrated beings, acquiring self-knowledge in their 'world of being' in which bodily and emotional experiences, and reasoning are inextricably intertwined.
I have approached this qualitative research as an ethnographic sociologist examining the issues from a critical high modernist perspective in order to demonstrate the pervading influence in Australian education of strong beliefs and values from the era of Enlightenment. Narrative analysis of 'memoir' in the form of self-defining memories was selected to gain a sensibility of the connectedness between human emotion, motion and reasoning in the lived experiences of students in three primary and three secondary schools across Years 2-12. An opportunity for human movement to be more valued and utilised in emerging educational frameworks that have life knowledge, dispositions and capabilities at their core is identified.
The inquiry proposes a conceptualisation of human motion in education for new times characterised by the need for people to develop personal resources and strong positive identities in order to cope with a world of rapid change and uncertainty.
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Preschool children's motor development and perceived competenceBoucher, Barbara H. 20 November 1990 (has links)
This study compared the effects of two conditions on
the motor development of preschool children and
investigated the relationship between preschool children's
motor development and perceived competence. Specifically,
it provided information for discerning: a) the relative
effects of a sensory-motor condition and an unstructured
activities condition on the motor development of preschool
children immediately following the 20-week intervention;
and b) whether perceived competence was related to motor
development in the preschool children following
termination of the treatment. Additionally, a teacher
survey which addressed the teacher-consultant relationship
was developed and piloted within the context of the study
for use in future research.
Subjects were 31 children enrolled in two preschool
programs including: a) the curriculum group (N=16), and
b) the non-curriculum group (N=l5). The Peabody Motor
Developmental Scales and the Pictorial Scale of Perceived
Competence and Social Acceptance were used to assess the
children's motor development and perceived competence,
respectively. All subjects were tested prior to the 20-
week intervention period and immediately following the
intervention.
A series of 2 (group) X 2 (testing time) repeated
measures analyses of variance were used to analyze the
impact of the two conditions. Results revealed that the
motor development of subjects in both groups changed
significantly over time; however, there were no
differences between groups.
Product-moment correlations and linear regression
analyses were used to assess the relationship between
preschool children's motor development and perceived
competence. Results revealed that perceived competence
relative to motor development did not change over time;
however a reciprocal relationship between motor
development and perceived competence in preschool children
was found.
The piloted teacher survey showed potential for
evaluation of service delivery models and as a tool for
teacher-consultant communication in future studies. / Graduation date: 1991
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The coordination dynamics of control and learning in a visuomotor tracking taskRyu, Young Uk 15 May 2009 (has links)
Two experiments were designed to examine the influence of the strength of perceptionaction
coupling on the control and learning of a visuomotor tracking pattern.
Participants produced rhythmic elbow flexion-extension motions to learn a visually
defined 90° relative phase tracking pattern with an external sinusoidal signal which was
set at 0.8 Hz with 8 cycles in a trial. Day 1 and Day 2 practice sessions consisted of a
total of 72 practice trials. There were two visuomotor congruency groups, a congruent
group with visual feedback representing the elbow’s rotation and an incongruent group
with feedback representing the elbow’s rotation transformed by 180°. Before Day 1
practice (pre-practice) and 24 hours after Day 2 practice (post-practice), participants
produced 0°, 45°, 90°, 135°, and 180° relative phase tracking patterns either with or
without tracking feedback. The external signal and the limb’s feedback were provided
in the same workspace in Experiment 1, while both signals were provided in a separate
workspace in Experiment 2. The pre-practice results demonstrated that the 0° relative
phase pattern was the most accurate and stable pattern, whereas the 90° and 135° relative phase patterns were less accurate and more variable. The incongruent group
produced a more accurate and less variable 180° relative phase pattern compared to the
congruent group. Practice led to a decrease in phase error and variability toward the
required 90° relative phase pattern in both experiments. The congruent group produced
more accurate tracking and less variable elbow amplitude compared to the incongruent
group in the separate workspace, whereas no such congruency effects were found in the
same workspace during practice. The post-practice results showed overall
improvements in phase accuracy and stability in most relative phase patterns with
practice. Overall deterioration in tracking performance was found when tracking
without feedback in the pre- and post-practice sessions. These findings demonstrated
that the perception-action coupling strength was modified by feedback, visuomotor
mapping, perceptual pattern, and workspace framework. The differential strength of
perception-action impacted the learning of the required visuomotor tracking pattern as
well as the production of tracking accuracy and stability differentially among the other
tracking patterns.
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Studies in the visual perception of motion : an investigation of individual differences in the visual perception of motion on the basis of observed differences in visuo-motor performance.Sevink, Chrisjan Agur. January 1970 (has links)
Thesis--M. Soc. Sc., University of Hong Kong. / Typewritten.
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Studies in the visual perception of motion: an investigation of individual differences in the visual perceptionof motion on the basis of observed differences in visuo-motorperformance.Sevink, Chrisjan Agur. January 1970 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Psychology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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THE IMPROVEMENT OF COGNITIVE FUNCTIONING IN THE TRAINABLE MENTALLY RETARDED THROUGH VISUAL-MOTOR TUTORINGThrapp, Robert Wayne, 1925- January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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