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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06647693
NA

Do Motor Synchrony Games Improve Self Regulation?

Sponsor: Appalachian State University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this study is to determine if progressively more challenging playground games (motor synchrony games) improve executive function in preschool-aged children.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

2 Years - 5 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

24

Start Date

2024-08-23

Completion Date

2025-01

Last Updated

2024-10-21

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Motor Synchrony Games (MSG)

The motor synchrony games (MSG) intervention uses fun but progressively more challenging gross motor and imitation games to promote behavioral self-regulation. Primary activities include: songs and fingerplays, stop and go games, and imitation games. These games get progressively more challenging over time by varying signal/modality. For example, going from a verbal and gestural paired "stop" and "go" signal to only a gestural stop signal. A fidelity checklist is used to ensure the intervention is appropriately used with the following criteria (uses \>10 imitation trials, \>10 Stop \& Go games, \>3 trials/min on average with \>5 trials/min preferred, use of progressive challenge, opportunities for Child Choice, environmental arrangement, and therapeutic strategies such as modeling).

Locations (1)

Appalachian State University

Boone, North Carolina, United States