Constraints and the Development of Body Systems Flashcards

1
Q

constraint

A

a characteristic of the organism, environment or task that encourages some movements while discouraging others

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2
Q

individual constraints

A

constraint that is:
a person’s unique physical and mental characteristics

ex; height, weight, leg length and weight, leg muscle strength, reaction time, attentional focus and motivation, fear of heights

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3
Q

individual constraints: body systems

A

interactions among body systems give rise to motor behavior

changes in body systems across the lifespan drive motor development

ex; sensory and nervous systems –> muscular system –> body

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4
Q

task constraints

A

constraint that is:
-outside the organism
- specific to the task

ex; rules of a sport, properties of task-specific equipment, such as: length and design of a walking cane, height of a basketball hoop

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5
Q

environmental constraints

A

which constraint:
properties of environment not specific to the task

ex; gravity, temperature, humidity, light level, ground surface, sociocultural environment

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6
Q

rate limiter

A

an individual constraint that holds back or slows the emergence of a motor behavior

ex; muscle strength
- muscle strength is a rate limiter for head movements in a newborn infant
- muscle strength is a constraint but NOT a
_____ for playing the piano in typically developing young adults

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7
Q

both

A

which of the following determine the capability of someone to balance a stick on their fingertip?

  1. the task constraint of stick length
  2. individual constraints related visual motor abilities
  3. both
  4. neither
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8
Q

transduction

A

the conversion of one form of energy into another

ex; energy from light is ____ into electrical activity of photoreceptors in the retina of the eye

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9
Q

sensation

A

the initial neural activity triggered by a stimulus

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10
Q

sensory receptors

A

specialized cells or sub-cellular structures that transduce an environmental stimulus into electrical activity that can be interpreted by the nervous system

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11
Q

perception

A

a multistage process that takes place in the brain and includes selecting, processing, organizing, and integrating information received from the senses

“meaning from the sensation”

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12
Q

vestibular system

A

key sensory system:
movement & orientation of head

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13
Q

vision

A

key sensory system:
light

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14
Q

proprioception

A

key sensory system (somatosensation):
- muscle lengths
- muscle and joint forces

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15
Q

cutaneous sensation

A

key sensory system (somatosensation):
- touch
- temperature
- vibration
- etc

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16
Q

visual acuity

A

the ability to perceive fine visual patterns

changes across the lifespan
- at birth: about 40 times worse than young adult
- young adult is age 4 - 6 years
- gradual decline from age 20 to 50 years
- more rapid decline from age 60 to 80 years

17
Q

visual accommodation

A

the ability to focus on near and far objects

changes across the life span
At birth: no accommodation
- best visual acuity for objects 7-10 inches away
- probably cannot see objects beyond 20 inches

At 4 months: accommodation over wide range of distances

At 6 months: accommodation like a young adult

18
Q

presbyopia

A

diminished ability to focus on near objects such as when reading

  • “my arms are not long enough to read the newspaper”
  • common over the age of 40 years
  • by age 60 years: no accommodation; presbyopia
19
Q

labyrinths

A

fluid-filled cavities of the inner ear

20
Q

vestibular system

A

this system detects:
- rotation of head