This article investigates children’s graphic representation of two complex motor skills, snowboarding and aikido, from the perspective of drawing fexibility research. In particular, the role of working memory capacity in the development of drawing flexibility is examined. A total of 127 children in the age range 5.7–11.9 years were shown short videos of snowboarding and aikido and were required to make drawings of them. In addition, participants were administered Goodenough’s Draw-a-man Test (that measures the ability to draw detail and proportion in the human figure) and two working memory tests (the Mr. Cucumber test and the Backward Digit Span). The snowboarding and aikido drawings were scored for 19 or 13 features, respectively, on which they could difer from the participant’s standard drawing of a person. The snowboarding and aikido scores were correlated, also controlling for age and Draw-a-man scores, indicating a common variance for drawing flexibility. The drawing flexibility scores increased with age, and were correlated with working memory capacity, also controlling for age and Draw-a-man scores. These results are consistent with a neo-Piagetian model of drawing flexibility development. Detailed analyses are also provided on children’s production of stick fgures and “transparencies,” and on the relation of each single modified feature with age and working memory capacity.

Children’s representation of specialized skilled movements: The cases of snowboarding and aikido

Sabrina Panesi;Sergio Morra
2024-01-01

Abstract

This article investigates children’s graphic representation of two complex motor skills, snowboarding and aikido, from the perspective of drawing fexibility research. In particular, the role of working memory capacity in the development of drawing flexibility is examined. A total of 127 children in the age range 5.7–11.9 years were shown short videos of snowboarding and aikido and were required to make drawings of them. In addition, participants were administered Goodenough’s Draw-a-man Test (that measures the ability to draw detail and proportion in the human figure) and two working memory tests (the Mr. Cucumber test and the Backward Digit Span). The snowboarding and aikido drawings were scored for 19 or 13 features, respectively, on which they could difer from the participant’s standard drawing of a person. The snowboarding and aikido scores were correlated, also controlling for age and Draw-a-man scores, indicating a common variance for drawing flexibility. The drawing flexibility scores increased with age, and were correlated with working memory capacity, also controlling for age and Draw-a-man scores. These results are consistent with a neo-Piagetian model of drawing flexibility development. Detailed analyses are also provided on children’s production of stick fgures and “transparencies,” and on the relation of each single modified feature with age and working memory capacity.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1163175
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