Local and global aspects of biological motion perception in children born at very low birth weight

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Abstract

Biological motion perception can be assessed using a variety of tasks. In the present study, 8- to 11-year-old children born prematurely at very low birth weight (<1500 g) and matched, full-term controls completed tasks that required the extraction of local motion cues, the ability to perceptually group these cues to extract information about body structure, and the ability to carry out higher order processes required for action recognition and person identification. Preterm children exhibited difficulties in all 4 aspects of biological motion perception. However, intercorrelations between test scores were weak in both full-term and preterm children - a finding that supports the view that these processes are relatively independent. Preterm children also displayed more autistic-like traits than full-term peers. In preterm (but not full-term) children, these traits were negatively correlated with performance in the task requiring structure-from-motion processing, r(30) = -.36, p

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APA

Williamson, K. E., Jakobson, L. S., Saunders, D. R., & Troje, N. F. (2015). Local and global aspects of biological motion perception in children born at very low birth weight. Child Neuropsychology, 21(5), 603–628. https://doi.org/10.1080/09297049.2014.945407

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