Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. 11 lip 2017 · With respect to the frequency of RMEs, we found that significantly higher total scores in RMEs with arms, hands, fingers and lower limbs were able to distinguish ASD infants from both DD and TD infants.

  2. Results: Findings showed that compared with TD children, those with ASD may exhibit shorter total rotation time, lower rotation amplitude, and weaker symmetry. This implies that children with ASD might exhibit decreased WRI abilities.

  3. 21 lut 2022 · The ability of maintaining midline head position during early infancy has been considered. Gima et al., using video recordings, studied spontaneous movements at 9–20 weeks post-term age in 14 very low birth-weight infants who later developed ASD.

  4. 11 lis 1998 · An autistic child, ≈3 months old, lacking the ability to rotate around the body midline during righting (a), attempts to sit up by ventroflexing his body in the midline plane (b). Sitting. Usually, at ≈6 months of age, a normal baby can sit upright.

  5. Learn about ten signs of possible autism-related delays in infants and toddlers, such as lack of smiling, imitation, babbling, and gesturing. This article does not address the query about...

  6. 18 mar 2021 · To code the behaviors of the infants, the team set up a coding scheme for the Repetitive Movement Episodes (RMEs) considering head, mouth and tongue, arms, hands, lower limbs, and torso as parts of the infant's body potentially involved in repetitive movements.

  7. 24 sie 2023 · During sleep state, neonates with high ASD risk exhibited larger standard deviation around the central frequency in the upper body and lower central frequency in the lower body.

  1. Ludzie szukają również