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  1. AU="Truxius, Lidia"
  2. AU="Xingyi Guo"
  3. AU="Gang Lin"
  4. AU="Oka, T"
  5. AU="Frank-Pearce, Summer G"
  6. AU="Hairi Li"
  7. AU="Park, SungHee"
  8. AU="Pascual-Carreras, Eudald"
  9. AU=Joffe Ari R
  10. AU="Buccafurri, Francesco"
  11. AU="Naomi H. Philip"
  12. AU="P. Naina"
  13. AU="Sigal, Leonard H"
  14. AU="Xu, T" AU="Xu, T"
  15. AU="Mazlout, Adam"
  16. AU="Novak, Cheryl B"
  17. AU="Ren, Zhongmin"
  18. AU="Nadhira Houhou-Fidouh"
  19. AU="Seiffert, Jacqui"
  20. AU=Zhang Zizhen
  21. AU="Bhupender Singh Negi"

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  1. Artikel ; Online: The internal structure of handwriting proficiency in beginning writers.

    Truxius, Lidia / Maurer, Michelle N / Sägesser Wyss, Judith / Roebers, Claudia M

    PloS one

    2024  Band 19, Heft 1, Seite(n) e0296096

    Abstract: Fluent and automatized handwriting frees cognitive resources for more complex elements of writing (i.e., spelling or text generation) or even math tasks (i.e., operating) and is therefore a central objective in primary school years. Most previous ... ...

    Abstract Fluent and automatized handwriting frees cognitive resources for more complex elements of writing (i.e., spelling or text generation) or even math tasks (i.e., operating) and is therefore a central objective in primary school years. Most previous research has focused on the development of handwriting automaticity across the school years and characteristics of handwriting difficulties in advanced writers. However, the relative and absolute predictive power of the different kinematic aspects for typically developing beginning handwriting remains unclear. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether and to what extent different kinematic aspects contribute to handwriting proficiency in typically developing beginning handwriters. Further, we investigated whether gender, socioeconomic background, or interindividual differences in executive functions and visuomotor integration contribute to children's acquisition of handwriting. Therefore, 853 first-grade children aged seven copied words on a digitized tablet and completed cognitive performance tasks. We used a confirmatory factor analysis to investigate how predefined kinematic aspects of handwriting, specifically the number of inversions in velocity (NIV), pen stops, pen lifts, and pressure on the paper, are linked to an underlying handwriting factor. NIV, pen stops, and pen lifts showed the highest factor loadings and therefore appear to best explain handwriting proficiency in beginning writers. Handwriting proficiency was superior in girls than boys but, surprisingly, did not differ between children from low versus high socioeconomic backgrounds. Handwriting proficiency was related to working memory but unrelated to inhibition, shifting, and visuomotor integration. Overall, these findings highlight the importance of considering different kinematic aspects in children who have not yet automatized pen movements. Results are also important from an applied perspective, as the early detection of handwriting difficulties has not yet received much research attention, although it is the base for tailoring early interventions for children at risk for handwriting difficulties.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Male ; Child ; Female ; Humans ; Handwriting ; Early Intervention, Educational ; Executive Function ; Factor Analysis, Statistical ; Inhibition, Psychological
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2024-01-05
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2267670-3
    ISSN 1932-6203 ; 1932-6203
    ISSN (online) 1932-6203
    ISSN 1932-6203
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0296096
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Artikel: From Scribbles to Script: Graphomotor Skills' Impact on Spelling in Early Primary School.

    Maurer, Michelle N / Truxius, Lidia / Sägesser Wyss, Judith / Eckhart, Michael

    Children (Basel, Switzerland)

    2023  Band 10, Heft 12

    Abstract: The acquisition of handwriting skills is a crucial goal in early primary school. Yet our comprehension of handwriting development, encompassing graphomotor skills and spelling, remains fragmented. The identification of predictors for handwriting skills ... ...

    Abstract The acquisition of handwriting skills is a crucial goal in early primary school. Yet our comprehension of handwriting development, encompassing graphomotor skills and spelling, remains fragmented. The identification of predictors for handwriting skills is essential for providing early support. This longitudinal study aimed to explore the predictive roles of gender, working memory, and motivation to handwrite for graphomotor skills six months later and spelling skills one year later. Paper-and-pencil tasks (graphomotor skills, spelling), a tablet task (working memory), and a questionnaire (teachers' ratings of children's handwriting motivation) were employed. This study included 363 first-grade children (49.8% girls) aged 6-9 years. Results from a structural equation model, controlling for age and socioeconomic background, revealed that girls exhibited superior performance in graphomotor skills, while boys tended to spell more accurately. Furthermore, working memory predicted graphomotor skills but not spelling. Additionally, motivation to handwrite predicted both first-grade graphomotor skills and second-grade spelling. This study extends contemporary evidence, demonstrating that graphomotor skills predict spelling while considering gender and motivation. The findings underscore the pivotal role of graphomotor skills in spelling acquisition and suggest their contribution to spelling difficulties.
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-12-01
    Erscheinungsland Switzerland
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2732685-8
    ISSN 2227-9067
    ISSN 2227-9067
    DOI 10.3390/children10121886
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Artikel: Spezifische und unspezifische kognitive Defizite bei Erstklasskindern mit Handschriftschwierigkeiten

    Truxius, Lidia / Roebers, Claudia M. / Sägesser Wyss, Judith / Maurer, Michelle N.

    Kindheit und Entwicklung

    2023  , Seite(n) 1–8

    Abstract: Theoretischer Hintergrund: Handschriftschwierigkeiten beim Schuleinstieg sind keine Seltenheit, wobei die spezifische Beteiligung kognitiver Prozesse wie der exekutiven Funktionen (EF), sowie der visuomotorischen Integration (VMI) ungeklärt bleiben. ... ...

    Titelübersetzung Specific and unspecific cognitive deficits in first-graders with handwriting difficulties
    Abstract Theoretischer Hintergrund: Handschriftschwierigkeiten beim Schuleinstieg sind keine Seltenheit, wobei die spezifische Beteiligung kognitiver Prozesse wie der exekutiven Funktionen (EF), sowie der visuomotorischen Integration (VMI) ungeklärt bleiben. Fragestellung: Welche kognitiven Defizite sind spezifisch für Kinder mit Handschriftschwierigkeiten und welche Defizite finden sich auch bei Erstklasskindern mit allgemeiner sonderpädagogischer Förderung? Methode: Kinder mit Handschriftschwierigkeiten (N = 13), Kinder mit sonderpädagogischer Förderung (N = 16) und Kinder ohne Förderung (gematchte Vergleichsgruppe; N = 23) wurden hinsichtlich kognitiver Prozesse und Schreibleistungen miteinander verglichen. Ergebnisse: Kinder mit Handschriftschwierigkeiten zeigten schwächere Leistungen in Maßen des Schreibprozesses, im Handschriftunterricht und in der VMI. Auf deskriptiver Ebene war das Arbeitsgedächtnis im Vergleich zur Vergleichsgruppe in beiden Förderbedarfsgruppen reduziert. Diskussion und Schlussfolgerung: Trotz einer eher geringen Stichprobengröße stellte die VMI konsistent ein spezifisches Defizit für Handschriftschwierigkeiten dar. Die Ergebnisse hinsichtlich des Arbeitsgedächtnisses lassen ein unspezifisches Defizit vermuten.
    Schlagwörter Elementary School Students ; Executive Function ; Exekutive Funktion ; Grundschulkinder ; Handschrift ; Handwriting ; Kurzzeitgedächtnis ; Short Term Memory ; Sonderschülerinnen und Sonderschüler ; Special Education Students ; Visual Motor Integration ; Visuomotorische Integration
    Sprache Deutsch
    Dokumenttyp Artikel
    ZDB-ID 1142124-1
    ISSN 0942-5403
    ISSN 0942-5403
    DOI 10.1026/0942-5403/a000404
    Datenquelle PSYNDEX

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