Journal
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 9, Pages 1653-1663Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0956797613478617
Keywords
developmental disorders; parietal lobe; spatial perception; visual-spatial ability; Williams syndrome
Categories
Funding
- NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS050876, NS050876, R01 NS054180, NS054180] Funding Source: Medline
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Localization of tactile stimuli to the hand and digits is fundamental to somatosensory perception. However, little is known about the development or genetic bases of this ability in humans. We examined tactile localization in normally developing children, adolescents, and adults and in people with Williams syndrome (WS), a genetic disorder resulting in a wide range of severe visual-spatial deficits. Normally developing 4-year-olds made large stimulus-localization errors, sometimes across digits, but nevertheless their errors revealed a structured internal representation of the hand. In normally developing individuals, errors became exponentially smaller over age, reaching the adult level by adolescence. In contrast, people with WS showed large localization errors regardless of age and a significant proportion of cross-digit errors, a profile similar to that of normally developing 4-year-olds. Thus, tactile localization reflects internal organization of the hand even early in normal development, undergoes substantial development in normal children, and is susceptible to developmental, but not organizational, impairment under genetic deficit.
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