4.3 Article

A profile of spatial abilities in people with Down syndrome

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jir.13111

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Down syndrome; dynamic vs. static; experimental; extrinsic vs. intrinsic; spatial abilities

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The study aimed to evaluate the spatial abilities of individuals with Down syndrome compared to typically developing children, using a comprehensive framework and various spatial tasks. The results showed deficits in dynamic-intrinsic and static-extrinsic spatial abilities for people with DS, suggesting the need for targeted interventions to improve their spatial skills.
BackgroundSpatial abilities are fundamental cognitive abilities, have direct applications in daily life, serve as a cognitive foundation for many other complex skills and are used in many specialty jobs. The current study aimed to systematically and comprehensively evaluate the spatial abilities of individuals with Down syndrome (DS) relative to mental ability-matched typically developing (TD) children based on Newcombe and Shipley's double-dimension theoretical framework for classifying spatial abilities.MethodsForty adolescents and young adults with DS and 40 TD children completed a nonverbal intelligence test (Raven's), two measures of static-extrinsic skills (water-level task and cart task), two measures of static-intrinsic skills (figure ground and form completion), two measures of dynamic-extrinsic skills (three mountains task and dog task) and two measures of dynamic-intrinsic spatial skills (mental rotation task and block design task).ResultsParticipants with DS showed reduced performance on two dynamic-intrinsic tasks and one static-extrinsic task (i.e. cart task) relative to TD children. Performances were similar in two dynamic-extrinsic tasks and two static-intrinsic tasks. Analyses of composite accuracy for each spatial category further confirmed deficits in dynamic-intrinsic and static-extrinsic categories for people with DS relative to TD children.ConclusionsOur results showed an uneven profile of spatial abilities in people with DS relative to ability-matched TD children with particular weaknesses in comprehending and manipulating dynamic-intrinsic and static-extrinsic spatial relations. Furthermore, our research has important clinical implications for more targeted interventions to improve spatial abilities in people with DS.

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