Development of Postural Control & Reactions

Descrição

Human Development Quiz sobre Development of Postural Control & Reactions, criado por marissa rivera em 01-10-2017.
marissa rivera
Quiz por marissa rivera, atualizado more than 1 year ago
marissa rivera
Criado por marissa rivera mais de 6 anos atrás
209
2

Resumo de Recurso

Questão 1

Questão
Developmental milestones are physical/behavioral signs of development or maturation.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 2

Questão
Developmental milestones are used for all of the following EXCEPT:
Responda
  • To assist with a diagnosis
  • Guide intervention planning
  • To determine what school the child will go to
  • Track developmental trends

Questão 3

Questão
Which of the following are limitations with the milestone concept?
Responda
  • Some of it may have to deal with anxiety levels of the child's parents
  • It does not account for "differences"
  • There is considerable variability in the way a child learns developmental skills
  • The 50% percentile does not determine if a child is outside the expected range

Questão 4

Questão
[blank_start]Movement[blank_end] is the act of moving (ex: crawling) [blank_start]Posture[blank_end] is the core strength, tone, and stability that helps the way one positions their body Both help to achieve a motor task/goal
Responda
  • Movement
  • Posture
  • Movement
  • Posture

Questão 5

Questão
Postural stability provides foundation for simple and complex movements.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 6

Questão
Which of the following are the two theories strictly associated with the development of movement?
Responda
  • Hierarchical
  • Organismic
  • Systems View
  • Contextual

Questão 7

Questão
When movement occurs as the nervous system matures: [blank_start]hierarchical[blank_end] When movement emerges from an interaction between the nervous system, body, environment, and the task: [blank_start]systems view[blank_end] [blank_start]In hierarchical[blank_end]: - reflexes are distinct from voluntary movement and must be suppressed/inhibited - reflexes reappear if there is CNS damage or if needed to support certain activities [blank_start]In Systems Approach[blank_end]: - [blank_start]Nonlinear[blank_end] --> multiple interacting subsystems including: body build characteristics, musculoskeletal, arousal, sensory, perceptual interacting with immediate environment - [blank_start]Behavior[blank_end] as emergent; no central pattern generator; even reflexes are not hardwired but the result of the convergence of multiple systems
Responda
  • hierarchical
  • systems view
  • In hierarchical
  • In Systems Approach
  • Nonlinear
  • Linear
  • Behavior
  • Reflex

Questão 8

Questão
Which is not a characteristic of the stepping reflex?
Responda
  • feet touches a surface and then stepping movements occur
  • seen in newborns - 4 month olds
  • reemerges during 5-6 months
  • a baby must learn how to crawl first

Questão 9

Questão
If there is a loss of a stepping reflex, how would they present themselves in the two theories? increase in weight in legs, but infant can still demonstrate reflex in water --> [blank_start]dynamic system[blank_end] maturation of higher brain centers/nervous system --> [blank_start]hierarchial[blank_end]
Responda
  • dynamic system
  • hierarchical
  • dynamic system
  • hierarchical

Questão 10

Questão
Culture does not have an impact on early motor development and reflexes.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 11

Questão
How are posture and movement related?
Responda
  • in order to move we have to have stability
  • both require tone
  • both require strength
  • all answers are correct

Questão 12

Questão
Which of the following are the theoretical basis of the spatiotemporal adaptation theory? (check all that apply).
Responda
  • Reflexes and reactions integrate into postural control.
  • With increasing competence with purposeful movement supports the development of cognitive and social skills.
  • Postural control provides foundation for functional skill.
  • Adaptation occurs through developmental and purposeful sequence of activity.
  • None of these answers are correct.

Questão 13

Questão
Does the spatiotemporal theory place emphasis on sensory-motor-sensory relationship?
Responda
  • yes
  • no

Questão 14

Questão
According to the spatiotemporal adaptation theory, if a child cannot complete a task such as walking, they will:
Responda
  • Cry and become upset
  • Revert back to lower level skills such as crawling to help them achieve their goal
  • Not finish the goal/task
  • Seek help from someone

Questão 15

Questão
What are the four components of the spatiotemporal adaptation theory?
Responda
  • movement, posture, environment, social participation
  • social participation, movement, adaptation, spiraling continuum
  • rest, sleep, play, work
  • movement, environment, adaptation, spiraling continuum

Questão 16

Questão
[blank_start]Movement[blank_end]: primitive to efficient; environmental challenges support development of complex thinking and acting; both intrinsically and extrinsically motivated [blank_start]Spiraling Continuum[blank_end]: Environmental stimulation/challenges cause “spatiotemporal stress” versus “distress” [blank_start]Adaptation[blank_end]: process of expanding child’s repertoire of movements and activities [blank_start]Environment[blank_end]: Child, others, objects, supporting surface, gravitational and 3 dimensional space
Responda
  • Movement
  • Environment
  • Adaptation
  • Spiraling Continuum
  • Movement
  • Environment
  • Adaptation
  • Spiraling Continuum
  • Movement
  • Environment
  • Adaptation
  • Spiraling Continuum
  • Movement
  • Environment
  • Adaptation
  • Spiraling Continuum

Questão 17

Questão
These are the environmental components of spatiotemporal adaptation: [blank_start]Holding Function[blank_end]: supports/embeds the infant [blank_start]Challenge[blank_end]: helps child reach higher levels of potential [blank_start]Interactive[blank_end]: promotes back-and-forth between self and environment [blank_start]Facilitating[blank_end]: provides source of stimulation- motivation to move
Responda
  • Holding Function
  • Challenge
  • Interactive
  • Facilitating

Questão 18

Questão
Which of the following are characteristics of the spiraling continuum?
Responda
  • Previously acquired patterns are called forward to adapt to the challenge or new experience
  • Previously acquired patterns are used to meet the environmental demand with success eliminating the stressful situation
  • Process of expanding child’s repertoire of movements and activities
  • Child, others, objects, supporting surface, gravitational and 3 dimensional space
  • With maturation of CNS, higher level functions emerge

Questão 19

Questão
How is the spiraling continuum process stalled in children with disabilities?
Responda
  • It doesn't affect children with disabilities
  • It causes distress, which alters equilibrium and prevents higher levels of learning to emerge
  • It stalls briefly but then returns to normal

Questão 20

Questão
What are lower level strategies used during a normal course of development?
Responda
  • prone extension
  • walking
  • running
  • early sitting

Questão 21

Questão
Check all of the following that represent the spatiotemporal adaptation theory.
Responda
  • sensorimotor approach to developing motor skills
  • developmental and purposeful sequences mature as a result of the child's experiences with the environment
  • integration of previously acquired movements with the new environmental demands being an ongoing process
  • none of these represent the spatiotemporal theory

Questão 22

Questão
Stress is the alteration of equilibrium in a child that causes them to make an adjustment within an environment to return to equilibrium.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 23

Questão
[blank_start]Muscle tone[blank_end]- gives muscle rigidity; (enough tension on muscle for weight shift with enough give for quick changes in movement) [blank_start]Postural tone[blank_end]-adds to muscle tone in extensor muscles that work against gravity [blank_start]Postural fixation[blank_end]- acts to maintain joint position against internal or external force; obtained by joint co-contraction of antagonist muscles around the joints Postural strategies distribute postural tone where needed to [blank_start]hold positions[blank_end] and/or for [blank_start]redistributing tone[blank_end] in anticipation of or during changes in position
Responda
  • Muscle tone
  • Postural tone
  • Postural fixation
  • hold positions
  • redistributing tone

Questão 24

Questão
Posture is the movement of body segments at any given time.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 25

Questão
Rank the following movement components from least complex (lowest level) to most complex (highest level): [blank_start]1[blank_end] - Physiological Flexion [blank_start]4[blank_end] - Lateral Flexion & Rotation [blank_start]3[blank_end] - Flexion (against gravity) [blank_start]2[blank_end] - Extension (against gravity)
Responda
  • 1
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2

Questão 26

Questão
Which of the following are primitive reflexes?
Responda
  • Protective Equilibrium
  • Tonic
  • Phasic
  • Righting

Questão 27

Questão
Rank the following postural control/movement patterns from 1-4 in the order that they develop: Unilateral weight shift/movement -- [blank_start]3[blank_end] Bilateral weight shift/movement -- [blank_start]2[blank_end] Weight bearing -- [blank_start]1[blank_end] Contralateral weight shift/movement -- [blank_start]4[blank_end]
Responda
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4

Questão 28

Questão
Which of the following are phasic reflexes?
Responda
  • rooting
  • all are examples of phasic reflexes
  • babinski
  • stepping

Questão 29

Questão
Phasic reflexes activate muscles/groups through full range/mobility but do not have a weight bearing function.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 30

Questão
Which of the phasic reflexes is associated with hypersensitivity, stimulus bound effect, sensory overload, and anxiety if it persists in the older child?

Questão 31

Questão
Which is not a characteristic of the development of antigravity movement?
Responda
  • COG shifts
  • Bilateral weight shifting
  • talking
  • Increased independence in extremity movement

Questão 32

Questão
Which of the following define tonic reflexes? (check all that apply)
Responda
  • Usually postures assumed in response to the position of the head and trunk in space or in relation to each other
  • Muscle tone is distributed in specific postural patterns, causing cessation of movement or fixation
  • Most frequently offset the body’s midline and its proximal joints
  • Usually produce observable movement in response to touch, pressure, movement of body, sight or sound

Questão 33

Questão
Which type of reflex is this?
Responda
  • Phasic
  • Tonic

Questão 34

Questão
Check all that apply to rotational righting.
Responda
  • Not present at birth
  • Move the midline of the body into alignment with the center of gravity
  • Activate muscles causing head and trunk to rotate around the central axis of the body
  • Unilateral weight shifting becomes evident
  • Body on body; neck on body
  • Landau & Optical Righting

Questão 35

Questão
Which is not a characteristic of optical righting?
Responda
  • Stimulus: visual input
  • Reaction: orientation of head position
  • Persists through life
  • Onset in utero

Questão 36

Questão
Research has shown that full-term infants sleeping non-prone have delays in motor milestones and lower scores on developmental screening measures than infants who slept prone.
Responda
  • True
  • False

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