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Dive into the research topics where Liam J. B. Hill is active.

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Featured researches published by Liam J. B. Hill.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2010

Exercising attention within the classroom

Liam J. B. Hill; Justin H. G. Williams; Lorna Aucott; June Milne; Jenny Thomson; Jessie Greig; Val Munro; Mark Mon-Williams

Aim  To investigate whether increased physical exercise during the school day influenced subsequent cognitive performance in the classroom.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2011

How does exercise benefit performance on cognitive tests in primary‐school pupils?

Liam J. B. Hill; Justin H. G. Williams; Lorna Aucott; Jenny Thomson; Mark Mon-Williams

Aim  We have previously demonstrated improved cognitive performance after a classroom‐based exercise regime. In this study, we examined the reproducibility of this effect in a more socio‐economically diverse sample and also investigated whether cognitive benefits of exercise were moderated by body mass index (BMI) or symptoms of attention‐deficit–hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).


Clinical Rehabilitation | 2017

A systematic review of high quality randomized controlled trials investigating motor skill programmes for children with developmental coordination disorder

Nick Preston; Sara Magallón; Liam J. B. Hill; Elizabeth Andrews; Sara M Ahern; Mark Mon-Williams

Objective: To identify effective motor training interventions for children with developmental coordination disorder from research graded as high quality (using objective criteria) for the purpose of informing evidence-based clinical practice. Data sources: We followed the guidance for conducting systematic reviews issued by the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination. Six OvidSP electronic databases (AMED, All EBM reviews (including Cochrane), Embase, Ovid MEDLINE, PsychARTICLES Full Text, PsycINFO) were searched systematically. We aimed to retain only randomized control trials and systematic reviews of randomized control trials, defined as the highest level of evidence by the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine. We searched reference lists of retained articles to identify further appropriate articles. Review methods: Two reviewers critically appraised and categorized articles by effect size (including confidence intervals), inclusion of power calculations and quality using the Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro) scale. Only studies scoring seven or more on the PEDro scale (classed by the PEDro as high reliability) were retained. Results: No systematic reviews met our criteria for inclusion from 846 articles yielded by the systematic search. Nine randomized control trials investigating 15 interventions to improve motor skills met our inclusion criteria for ‘high quality’. Nevertheless, not all included studies were adequately powered for determining an effect. Conclusion: Large effect sizes associated with 95 % confidence intervals suggest that ‘Neuromotor Task Training’, ‘Task-oriented Motor Training’ and ‘Motor Imagery + Task Practice Training’ are the most effective reported interventions for improving motor skills in children with developmental coordination disorder.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014

The ontogeny of visual -motor memory and its importance in handwriting and reading: a developing construct

Amanda H. Waterman; Jelena Havelka; Peter Culmer; Liam J. B. Hill; Mark Mon-Williams

Humans have evolved a remarkable ability to remember visual shapes and use these representations to generate motor activity (from Palaeolithic cave drawings through Jiahu symbols to cursive handwriting). The term visual–motor memory (VMM) describes this psychological ability, which must have conveyed an evolutionary advantage and remains critically important to humans (e.g. when learning to write). Surprisingly, little empirical investigation of this unique human ability exists—almost certainly because of the technological difficulties involved in measuring VMM. We deployed a novel technique for measuring this construct in 87 children (6–11 years old, 44 females). Children drew novel shapes presented briefly on a tablet laptop screen, drawing their responses from memory on the screen using a digitizer stylus. Sophisticated algorithms (using point-registration techniques) objectively quantified the accuracy of the childrens reproductions. VMM improved with age and performance decreased with shape complexity, indicating that the measure captured meaningful developmental changes. The relationship between VMM and scores on nationally standardized writing assessments were explored with the results showing a clear relationship between these measures, even after controlling for age. Moreover, a relationship between VMM and the nationally standardized reading test was mediated via writing ability, suggesting VMMs wider importance within language development.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Moving to Capture Children’s Attention: Developing a Methodology for Measuring Visuomotor Attention

Liam J. B. Hill; Rachel Coats; Faisal Mushtaq; Justin H. G. Williams; Lorna Aucott; Mark Mon-Williams

Attention underpins many activities integral to a child’s development. However, methodological limitations currently make large-scale assessment of children’s attentional skill impractical, costly and lacking in ecological validity. Consequently we developed a measure of ‘Visual Motor Attention’ (VMA)—a construct defined as the ability to sustain and adapt visuomotor behaviour in response to task-relevant visual information. In a series of experiments, we evaluated the capability of our method to measure attentional processes and their contributions in guiding visuomotor behaviour. Experiment 1 established the method’s core features (ability to track stimuli moving on a tablet-computer screen with a hand-held stylus) and demonstrated its sensitivity to principled manipulations in adults’ attentional load. Experiment 2 standardised a format suitable for use with children and showed construct validity by capturing developmental changes in executive attention processes. Experiment 3 tested the hypothesis that children with and without coordination difficulties would show qualitatively different response patterns, finding an interaction between the cognitive and motor factors underpinning responses. Experiment 4 identified associations between VMA performance and existing standardised attention assessments and thereby confirmed convergent validity. These results establish a novel approach to measuring childhood attention that can produce meaningful functional assessments that capture how attention operates in an ecologically valid context (i.e. attentions specific contribution to visuomanual action).


Human Movement Science | 2016

Training compliance control yields improved drawing in 5–11 year old children with motor difficulties

Winona Snapp-Childs; Katy A. Shire; Liam J. B. Hill; Mark Mon-Williams; Geoffrey P. Bingham

There are a large number of children with motor difficulties including those that have difficulty producing movements qualitatively well enough to improve in perceptuo-motor learning without intervention. We have developed a training method that supports active movement generation to allow improvement in a 3D tracing task requiring good compliance control. Previously, we tested a limited age range of children and found that training improved performance on the 3D tracing task and that the training transferred to a 2D drawing test. In the present study, school children (5-11years old) with motor difficulties were trained in the 3D tracing task and transfer to a 2D drawing task was tested. We used a cross-over design where half of the children received training on the 3D tracing task during the first training period and the other half of the children received training during the second training period. Given previous results, we predicted that younger children would initially show reduced performance relative to the older children, and that performance at all ages would improve with training. We also predicted that training would transfer to the 2D drawing task. However, the pre-training performance of both younger and older children was equally poor. Nevertheless, post-training performance on the 3D task was dramatically improved for both age groups and the training transferred to the 2D drawing task. Overall, this work contributes to a growing body of literature that demonstrates relatively preserved motor learning in children with motor difficulties and further demonstrates the importance of games in therapeutic interventions.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2014

Lags in measuring eye–hand coordination

Liam J. B. Hill; Peter Culmer; Mark Mon-Williams

We challenge a number of the claims for novelty and innovation made in a recent published paper (Lee et al., 2014) with regard to a computerised methodology that these authors present for assessing eye-hand coordination (EHC). Published work on similar pre-existing computerised systems is discussed and arguments made for these alternative systems being equal, if not superior, in terms of their innovativeness. The commentary does not dispute the usefulness of systems such as the one described by Lee et al. Rather, in the interests of scholarship it provides an accompanying insight into the significant scholarly contributions previously, and contemporaneously, being made by other research groups working in this area.


Psychological Science | 2018

Hitting the Target: Mathematical Attainment in Children Is Related to Interceptive-Timing Ability:

Oscar Giles; Katy A. Shire; Liam J. B. Hill; Faisal Mushtaq; Amanda H. Waterman; Raymond Holt; Peter Culmer; Justin H. G. Williams; Richard M. Wilkie; Mark Mon-Williams

Interceptive timing is a fundamental ability underpinning numerous actions (e.g., ball catching), but its development and relationship with other cognitive functions remain poorly understood. Piaget suggested that children need to learn the physical rules that govern their environment before they can represent abstract concepts such as number and time. Thus, learning how objects move in space and time may underpin the development of related abstract representations (i.e., mathematics). To test this hypothesis, we captured objective measures of interceptive timing in 309 primary school children (5–11 years old), alongside scores for general motor skill and national standardized academic attainment. Bayesian estimation showed that interceptive timing (but not general motor capability) uniquely predicted mathematical ability even after we controlled for age, reading, and writing attainment. This finding demonstrates that interceptive timing is distinct from other motor skills with specificity in predicting childhood mathematical ability independently of other forms of attainment and motor capability.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Robot Guided ‘Pen Skill’ Training in Children with Motor Difficulties

Katy A. Shire; Liam J. B. Hill; Winona Snapp-Childs; Geoffrey P. Bingham; Georgios K. Kountouriotis; Sally E. Barber; Mark Mon-Williams

Motor deficits are linked to a range of negative physical, social and academic consequences. Haptic robotic interventions, based on the principles of sensorimotor learning, have been shown previously to help children with motor problems learn new movements. We therefore examined whether the training benefits of a robotic system would generalise to a standardised test of ‘pen-skills’, assessed using objective kinematic measures [via the Clinical Kinematic Assessment Tool, CKAT]. A counterbalanced, cross-over design was used in a group of 51 children (37 male, aged 5–11 years) with manual control difficulties. Improved performance on a novel task using the robotic device could be attributed to the intervention but there was no evidence of generalisation to any of the CKAT tasks. The robotic system appears to have the potential to support motor learning, with the technology affording numerous advantages. However, the training regime may need to target particular manual skills (e.g. letter formation) in order to obtain clinically significant improvements in specific skills such as handwriting.


Journal of Vision | 2015

Visual Motor Memory: A developing construct

Mark Mon-Williams; Amanda H. Waterman; Peter Culmer; Liam J. B. Hill

BACKGROUND Humans possess a remarkable ability to remember visual shapes and generate motor activity from these visual representations. We use the term visual-motor memory to describe this skill. This skill is critically important to humans during development (e.g. when learning to write). Moreover, this ability must have conveyed an evolutionary advantage to humans and is part of the archaeological evidence for the existence of cultural transmission across civilisations over millennia (from Palaeolithic cave drawings through Jiahu symbols to cursive handwriting). Surprisingly little empirical investigation of this unique human ability exists-almost certainly because of the technological difficulties involved in measuring this skill. METHODS We deployed a novel technique for measuring this psychological construct in 87 children (6-11 years old, 44 females). Children drew novel shapes presented briefly on a tablet laptop screen, drawing their responses from memory on the screen using a digitizer stylus. Sophisticated algorithms (using point-registration techniques) objectively quantified the accuracy of the childrens reproductions. RESULTS VMM improved with age and performance decreased with shape complexity, indicating that the measure captured meaningful developmental changes. The relationship between VMM and the childrens scores on nationally standardized writing assessments were explored and the results showed a clear relationship between these measures- even after controlling for age. Moreover, a relationship between VMM and the nationally standardized reading test was mediated via writing ability, Conclusion: We have developed an objective measure of visual-motor memory that can be readily deployed in classroom settings. The VMM measures appear to be powerful predictors of reading and writing ability (even when controlling for age). Thus, VMM appears to be important within language development. We have now successfully deployed the VMM test across children within an English city (Bradford), allowing exploration of the effects of ethnicity and socio-economic status on visual memory. Meeting abstract presented at VSS 2015.

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