Tesis
Influência de restrições intrínsecas e extrínsecas no alcance manual de lactentes.
Fecha
2007-03-29Registro en:
CARVALHO, Raquel de Paula. The influence of intrinsic and extrinsic constraints on reaching movements in young infants.. 2007. 115 f. Tese (Doutorado em Ciências Biológicas) - Universidade Federal de São Carlos, São Carlos, 2007.
Autor
Carvalho, Raquel de Paula
Institución
Resumen
The aim of the current research was to examine the influence of intrinsic and extrinsic
constraints on reaching movements in 4-6-month-old infants. Age, level of skill and
experience gained by spontaneous practice of reaching were the intrinsic constraints analyzed.
The relationship between muscular torque required for reaching and gravitational torque was
the extrinsic constraint, which was manipulated by different body orientations. Kinematical
and qualitative variables for movements performed in supine, reclined and seated positions
were analyzed in three different studies in order to verify how constraints affect young
infants reaching. The results indicate that body orientation affected reaching behavior in 4-
month-old infants. However, when considering the level of skill rather than age, body
orientation was shown to affect reaching behavior during its emergence only in less-skilled
reachers. The level of skill is thus suggested to be a more relevant constraint than age in the
acquisition of reaching. Temporal and spatio-temporal parameters of reaching were more
sensitive to constraints imposed by body orientation, age and level of skill. Seated position
elicited both reaching in less-skilled reachers during the behavior acquisition and grasping in
more-skilled reachers after spontaneous practice. These findings suggest that level of skill,
experience in reaching, and body orientation may affect reaching behavior in young infants.
These constraints should therefore be taken into account when examining the development of
infant reaching. This work supports the idea that the confluence of constraints determines the
young infants action and that a change in this confluence can eventuate in a change in action.