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Original article

Accuracy and Vividness in Motor Imagery Ability: Differences between Children and Young Adults

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Pages 297-308 | Received 02 Mar 2020, Accepted 19 Jun 2020, Published online: 07 Jul 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Motor imagery (MI) refers to the imagination of a motor task without actual movement execution. The purpose of this study was to compare MI accuracy and vividness, and motor proficiency between children (n = 101; 7–12 years) and young adults (n = 140; 18–25 years). Results indicated that young adults were significantly more accurate and rated their MI significantly more vivid than children. For MI accuracy, between-subject effects showed that young adults had higher scores than children on three of the four subscales and the action subscale significantly predicted motor proficiency. These findings indicate that MI ability continues to develop into adulthood.

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