Disability and Motor Behavior
A Handbook of Research
Inbunden, Engelska, 2023
Av Ali S. Brian, Pamela S. Beach, Ali S. Brian, Pamela S. Beach
1 749 kr
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2023-10-27
- Mått182 x 264 x 20 mm
- Vikt689 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieSpecial Education Law, Policy, and Practice
- Antal sidor230
- FörlagBloomsbury Publishing Plc
- ISBN9781538168950
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Contributors:Pamela Beach, Collin D. Bowersock, Claire Bridges, Albert R. Cavalier, Heather A. Feldner, Nancy Getchell, Emily Gilbert, Daphne Golden, Candice Howard-Smith, Lisa Kenyon, Alyssa LaForme Fiss, Lauren Lieberman, Meghann Lloyd, Samuel W. Logan, Julia Looper, Megan MacDonald, Jessica Lynn McDonnell, Iva Obrusnikova, Melissa Pangelinan, Adam Pennell, Melanie Perreault, Nadja Schott, Bethany Sloane, Semyon Slobounov, Alex Stribing, Ming-Chih Sung, Matthias O. Wagner, Alexa Walter, James WilkesAbout the Editors:Ali S. Brian is a faculty member in the areas of motor behavior and adapted physical education in the College of Education, Department of Physical Education at the University of South Carolina. Dr. Brian’s PhD is from The Ohio State University in Kinesiology. Dr. Brian is a Certified Adapted Physical Educator (CAPE) and is the director of the Developmental Adapted Physical Education/Activity Research Lab at the University of South Carolina. Dr. Brian’s research agenda focuses on underlying mechanisms that support positive developmental trajectories for whole-child health, including early integrative intervention efforts, for preschoolers with and without disabilities as well as for youth with visual impairments. Dr. Brian has published 1 book, 8 book chapters, 70 articles, 62 research abstracts, and over 160 presentations. As a result of this work Dr. Brian has received the Early Career Distinguished Scholar award from the North American Society for Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity (NASPSPA), the David P. Beaver Adapted Physical Activity Young Scholar Award from the National Consortium for Physical Education for Individuals with Disabilities (NCPEID), the Early Career Research Award from the College of Education at the University of South Carolina, the Breakthrough Star Award from the Vice President of Research at the University of South Carolina and was inducted as a Fellow of Research Council of SHAPE America. Dr. Brian has also served as Chair of the SHAPE America Research Council, as a and member of the Executive Committee of the NCPEID and the International Motor Development Research Consortium. Presently, Dr. Brian is the Research Director for the Institute of Movement Studies for Individuals with Visual Impairments. She serves as an Associate Editor for Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport and on the editorial board of Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy. Pamela S. Haibach-Beach is a professor in the area of motor behavior in the Department of Kinesiology, Sport Studies, and Physical Education at the State University of New York Brockport. She earned her Ph.D. at the Pennsylvania State University in Kinesiology specializing in Motor Control. Dr. Haibach-Beach is the Associate Director of the Honors College and the Director of the Summer Undergraduate Research Program at SUNY Brockport. She also co-founded and co-directs The Institute on Movement Studies for Individuals with Visual Impairments (IMSVI). She has been awarded with the Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching, the highest teaching award in SUNY, the Roland Fontaine’s student engagement award, and has been designated as a SUNY Online Ambassador. She has also recently been awarded the Corrine Kirchner National Research award from the American Foundation for the Blind for the Institute of Movement Studies for Individuals with Visual Impairment. Dr. Haibach-Beach actively encourages cultural competency through international experiences and has organized and led several student trips to New Zealand and the Dominican Republic. She teaches Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) classes with institutions in Lebanon and the Netherlands. Her research focuses upon motor behavior and balance in individuals of any age who are blind or deafblind. She publishes research focused articles, practical articles, and chapters on gross motor development and balance interventions and presents nationally and internationally on her work with individuals with visual impairments and deafblindness including over 40 articles, 4 chapters, 85 national and international presentations, as well as 16 educational videos and webinars. In addition, Dr. Haibach-Beach has published two editions of the textbook “Motor Learning and Development” which have been widely adopted as well as the book, “Gross Motor Development Curriculum: For Children with Visual Impairment.” She co-founded the International Symposium on Physical Activity in Individuals with Visual Impairments and Deafblindness and continues to serve on the scientific committee. She has served on the American Kinesiology Board, chaired the National Association for Sport and Physical Educations Motor Development and Learning Academy, and is an active Brockport Lions Club member in which she was recently awarded the Lions Centennial Award and Membership Award. Dr. Haibach-Beach has also recently been inducted into Delta Kappa Gamma, a professional honor society of key women educators worldwide.
- Chapter 1: Motor Behavior and Visual Impairment - Alex Stribing and Adam PennellBackgroundGuiding Frameworks and AssumptionsGross Motor in JuvenescenceFine Motor in JuvenescenceGross Motor in AdulthoodFine Motor in AdulthoodHonorable Mention: Postural Control and BalanceSystems Perspective: A Spotlight on Psychological VariablesFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsConclusionChapter 2: Motor Behavior and Children who are Hard of Hearing, Deaf, or Deafblind - Pamela Beach, Melanie Perreault, and Lauren LiebermanMotor MilestonesBalanceMotor CompetencePractical ImplicationsConclusionsChapter 3: Motor Behavior and Sensory Processing Disorders - Candice Howard-SmithIntroductionSensory Processing DisordersTypes of SPDSPD and Motor BehaviorSPD, Disabilities, and Motor BehaviorAutism Spectrum DisorderDown SyndromeAttention Deficit Hyperactivity DisorderFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsConclusionsChapter 4: Motor Behavior and Autism Spectrum Disorder - Megan MacDonald and Ming-Chih SungIntroductionYoung Children (Infants and Preschoolers) with ASDSchool-Age Children with ASDBeyond School: Lifespan Motor Skills of Individuals with ASDSummary of EvidenceFuture DirectionImplicationsReferencesChapter 5: ASD FMS Interventions - Meghann LloydImportance of Motor Skill DevelopmentFundamental Motor Skill InterventionsFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsReferencesChapter 6: Motor Behavior and Emotional and Behavioral Disorders - Iva Obrusnikova and Albert R. CavalierDefinitions of EBDPrevalence of EBDInternalizing: Anxiety Disorders DefinedPrevalence of Anxiety DisordersConceptual Models of Anxiety disordersMotor Impairments and Anxiety DisordersExternalizing: Attention-Deficient/Hyperactivity Disorder DefinedPrevalence of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity DisorderConceptual Models of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Motor Impairments and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity DisorderAltered Cerebral Structures and Neurotransmitter ImbalanceAttention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder ComorbiditiesImplications for Research and PracticeReferencesChapter 7: Motor Behavior and Specific Language Impairment - Matthias O. WagnerContent OverviewResearch OverviewMotor Control Related Issues in Specific Language ImpairmentMotor Learning Related Issues in Specific Language ImpairmentMotor Development Related Issues in Specific Language ImpairmentFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsConclusionReferencesChapter 8: Motor Behavior and Cerebral Palsy - Melissa Pangelinan and Claire BridgesDefinitions, Etiology, and DiagnosisOverviewRisk Factor or Possible Causes of CPSymptomsTypesDiagnosis and ClassificationEmpirical Research: Cerebral Palsy and Motor BehaviorCP and Motor BehaviorEarly InterventionInterventions in Childhood and BeyondFuture Research DirectionsTranslating Research to PracticeConclusionReferencesChapter 9: Motor Behavior and Neurodegenerative Disorders Associated with Aging - Nadja SchottIntroductionUnder the Magnifying Glass: Gait as an Important Predictor for Motor-Cognitive Performance in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s DiseaseMotor Learning in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s DiseaseAlzheimer’s DiseaseParkinson’s DiseaseFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsConclusionReferencesChapter 10: Motor Behavior and Intellectual Disabilities - Alyssa LaForme Fiss and Julia LooperIntroductionExamples of Genetic CausesResearch on Motor and Cognitive DevelopmentMotor-Control and Motor-Learning in Individuals with IDFuture Research DirectionsResearch to PracticeConclusionReferencesChapter 11: Developmental Delay, Developmental Coordination Disorder, and Motor Behavior - Daphne Golden and Nancy GetchellDevelopmental Delay: An Early Sign of Developmental Coordination DisorderDevelopmental Coordination DisorderIdentification and Diagnosis of DCDThe Developmental Conundrum in DCD Identification and DiagnosisMotor Behavior Research Related to DCDFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsConclusionReferencesChapter 12: Motor Behavior and Traumatic Brain Injury - James Wilkes, Alexa Walter, and Semyon SlobounovIntroductionClinical Translation of Pathophysiology to DysfunctionMotor Control Dysfunction after TBIBalance and GaitReaction TimeOculomotor FunctionKinesiophobiaFuture ResearchPractical ApplicationsConclusionConflict of InterestAcknowledgementsReferencesChapter 13: Motor Behavior and Rehabilitation after Spinal Cord Injury - Collin D. Bowersock and Jessica Lynn McDonnellContent OverviewResearch OverviewFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsConclusionReferencesChapter 14: Motor Behavior and Profound Intellectual and Multiple Disabilities - Bethany Sloane, Heather A. Feldner, Lisa Kenyon, and Samuel W. LoganOverview, Language, and Terminology Related to Profound Intellectual and Multiple DisabilitiesMotor Behavior and PIMD Population Empirical Research SummaryInternational Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health Model for (ICF)Body Functions and StructuresMotor DevelopmentChallenging BehaviorsAlertness LevelSummaryActivity and ParticipationMotor ActivityPhysical ActivityEnvironmental and Personal FactorsAssistive TechnologySupports and RelationshipsAttitudesSummaryFuture ResearchPractical ImplicationsConclusionReferencesChapter 15: Motor Behavior and Health Impairments in Children - Emily GilbertOverviewPediatric CancerObesityDiabetesMotor Competence Research in Youth with Health ImpairmentsPediatric CancerObesityDiabetesPractical ImplicationsFuture ResearchConclusionReferencesIndexAbout the EditorsAbout the Contributors