AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on how infants naturally learn to walk during free play, contrasting it with previous research that looked at periodic walking on uniform paths.
  • Babies aged 12 to 19 months took an average of 2,368 steps and experienced 17 falls per hour, showing that novice walkers could cover more distance faster than expert crawlers, despite similar fall rates.
  • Post walking onset, infants showed significant improvement in their walking abilities, with better efficiency and fewer falls, highlighting that varied and spontaneous practice is essential for learning to walk.

Article Abstract

A century of research on the development of walking has examined periodic gait over a straight, uniform path. The current study provides the first corpus of natural infant locomotion derived from spontaneous activity during free play. Locomotor experience was immense: Twelve- to 19-month-olds averaged 2,368 steps and 17 falls per hour. Novice walkers traveled farther faster than expert crawlers, but had comparable fall rates, which suggests that increased efficiency without increased cost motivates expert crawlers to transition to walking. After walking onset, natural locomotion improved dramatically: Infants took more steps, traveled farther distances, and fell less. Walking was distributed in short bouts with variable paths--frequently too short or irregular to qualify as periodic gait. Nonetheless, measures of periodic gait and of natural locomotion were correlated, which indicates that better walkers spontaneously walk more and fall less. Immense amounts of time-distributed, variable practice constitute the natural practice regimen for learning to walk.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3591461PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0956797612446346DOI Listing

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