Young children's strategies were evaluated as they grasped and used objects. Spoons containing food and toys mounted on handles were presented to 9-, 14-, and 19-month-old children with the handle alternately oriented to the left and right. The alternating orientations revealed strategies that the children used for grasping items. Younger children usually reached with their preferred hand, disregarding the item's orientation. In the case of the spoon, this strategy produced awkward grasps that had to be corrected later. Older children anticipated the problem, alternated the hand used, and achieved an efficient radial grip (i.e., handle grasped with base of thumb toward food or toy end) for both orientations. A model of the development of action-selection strategies is proposed to illustrate planning in children younger than 2 years.
Children (aged 9, 14, 19, and 24 months) were encouraged to use tools to achieve a demonstrated goal. Each tool was most efficiently applied when held by the handle with the thumb toward the head of the tool in a radial grip. The tools were presented at midline and oriented to the left and right on alternating trials, so the children who managed to grasp a tool in both orientations with the radial grip demonstrated planning of actions in advance. The tools included a spoon, hairbrush, toy hammer, and magnet; the goals were to feed one's self, feed another, brush one's hair, brush another's hair, hit pegs, and retrieve metal objects. Children were found to use more radial grips with the self‐directed tools (i.e., hairbrush‐to‐self and spoon‐to‐self), indicating that they could plan their actions better when directed toward the self than toward an external goal.
When adults reach for an object, kinematic measures of their approach movement are affected by what they intend to do after grasping it. We examined whether such future intended actions would be reflected in the approach-to-grasp phase of infant reaching. Twenty-one 10-month-old infants were encouraged to either throw a ball into a tub or fit it down a tube. Kinematic measures of the approach phase of the reach toward the ball were obtained using a motion analysis system. Infants, like adults, reached for the ball faster if they were going to subsequently throw it as opposed to using it in the precision action. The perceptual aspects of the ball were the same and cannot account for these kinematic differences. Infants appear to be planning both segments of their actions in advance. Our findings provide evidence for a level of sophistication in infant motor planning not reported before.
There
is concern about potential exposure to opportunistic pathogens
when reopening buildings closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In this
study, water samples were collected before, during, and after flushing
showers in five unoccupied (i.e., for ∼2 months) university
buildings with quantification of opportunists via a cultivation-based
assay (Legionella pneumophila only) and quantitative PCR. L. pneumophila were not detected by either method; Legionella spp., nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM), and Mycobacterium
avium complex (MAC), however, were widespread. Using
quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA), the estimated risks
of illness from exposure to L. pneumophila and MAC via showering were generally low (i.e., less than a 10–7 daily risk threshold), with the exception of systemic
infection risk from MAC exposure in some buildings. Flushing rapidly
restored the total chlorine (as chloramine) residual and decreased
bacterial gene targets to building inlet concentrations within 30
min. During the postflush stagnation period, the residual chlorine
dissipated within a few days and bacteria rebounded, approaching preflush
concentrations after 6–7 days. These results suggest that flushing
can quickly improve water quality in unoccupied buildings, but the
improvement may only last a few days.
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