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Rebecca Winter

Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin, M.Sc.

derzeit beurlaubt


Forschung

Forschungsschwerpunkte:


The fine-motor and sensorimotor foundations of learning

In a series of studies, we have demonstrated that fine motor skills (FMS) link to a range of early cognitive and academic skills. Specifically, preschoolers’ FMS relate to their concurrent and later performance on measures of early literacy, reading, and mathematics skills. Further, we have found evidence that children’s cognitive and language development is also affected by their FMS. The question now is to understand why FMS link to academic and cognitive development.

Understanding why and how children’s FMS influence their cognitive development relates to age-old philosophical struggles in understanding how the body relates to the mind (e.g., dualism) and how the senses influence and can be trusted in thought (e.g., rationalism, empiricism, phenomenology). Moreover, understanding how sensorimotor factors influence cognitive and academic development has implications for numerous disciplines, including education, psychology, medicine, and neurology.

Our current work has implicated three main explanations for links between FMS and cognitive development. The first points towards common developmental underpinnings, the second focuses on the functionality of FMS and sensorimotor skills for learning, and the third on shared internalized processes. One example of the latter explanation we termed the Nimble-Hands, Nimble-Minds hypothesis (Suggate & Stoeger, 2017, Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology).

Accordingly, we attempt to study links between FMS, sensorimotor skills, and cognitive development in a broad number of ways, touching on a number of disciplines. Particular foci of our work are on:

a)       establishing the key fine and sensorimotor skills involved;

b)      determining links between fine and sensorimotor skills and language and conceptual development;

c)       testing causal pathways between fine and sensorimotor skills and later academic development;

d)      conducting experiments to investigate theoretical explanations for links.

Project collaborators:

Dr. Philipp Martzog

Prof. Dr. Heidrun Stoeger

Dr. Sebastian Suggate

Tanja Kipfelsberger

Viktoria Karle

Rebecca Winter


Publikationen

Winter, R. E., Stoeger, H., & Suggate, S. P. (2024). Fine motor skills and their link to receptive vocabulary, expressive vocabulary, and narrative language skills. First Language. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1177/01427237241233084

Winter, R. E., Stoeger, H., & Suggate, S. P. (2021). Fine motor skills and lexical processing in children and adults. Frontiers in Psychology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.666200

Shiban, Y., Diemer, J., Brandl, S., Zack, R., Mühlberger, A., & Wüst, A. (2016). Trier Social Stress Test in vivo and in virtual reality: Dissociation of response domains. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 110, 47-55. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2016.10.008


Vorträge

Zack, R. E., Suggate, S. & Stöger, H. (2018, September). Wie hängen feinmotorische Fähigkeiten mit passiven, expressiven und narrativen Sprachfähigkeiten zusammen? Vortrag auf der 83. Sektionstagung der Arbeitsgruppe für empirische pädagogische Forschung (AEPF), Lüneburg.

Zack, R. E., Suggate, S., & Stöger, H. (2017, März). Understanding the link between motor and vocabulary development: Body-Object Interaction or Body-Part-Association? Vortrag auf der 59. Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP), Dresden.



  1. Fakultät für Humanwissenschaften
  2. Institut für Bildungswissenschaft

Rebecca Winter

PT 5.1.06

 

Zack

Tel.  0941/943-1702
Fax  0941/943-1993

rebecca1.winter@ur.de