“…Two other studies showed that the end-state comfort eVect is manifested in nonhuman animals (Chapman, Weiss, & Rosenbaum, 2010;Weiss, Wark, & Rosenbaum, 2007). Several studies also showed a marked developmental trend for the end-state comfort eVect, with the eVect not taking hold until 9 years of age for typically developing children (Adalbjornsson, Fischman, & Rudisill, 2008;Thibaut & Toussaint, 2010;van Swieten et al, 2010), whereas the end-state comfort eVect is compromised in children with autism (Hughes, 1996), in children with developmental coordination disorder (van Swieten et al, 2010), and in adults with cerebral palsy (Steenbergen, Hulstijn, & Dortmans, 2000). For reviews, see Rosenbaum (2010) and Rosenbaum, Cohen, Meulenbroek, and Vaughan (2006).…”