Improving children’s visual health by integrating motor imagery training into physical education classes
Sheng Zhou, Yuanyuan Ren, Sien Ma, Meng Zhang, Rongbin Yin

TL;DR
Adding motor imagery training to physical education classes can improve children's visual health and may help prevent myopia.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that integrating motor imagery training into PE classes improves visual and cognitive skills in children.
Findings
Kinetic visual acuity, accommodation facility, and uncorrected distance visual acuity improved significantly in all experimental groups.
Groups 1 and 2 showed significant improvements in cognitive specific motor imagery abilities.
Significant differences were found among groups in visual acuity and accommodation facility measures.
Abstract
Myopia threatens healthy physical and mental development in children. Research suggests that motor imagery training could serve as a non-invasive and cost-effective non-pharmacological intervention to address myopia and promote health. Therefore, this study examined the effect of incorporating motor imagery training into physical education classes on children’s visual health. A 16-week intervention was conducted. The participants were 154 children divided into four groups: three experimental and one control. Group 1 performed motor imagery exercises with a visual target moving near and far, Group 2 performed physical activity imagery exercises combined with visual tasks, and Group 3 performed physical activity combined with visual tasks. After the intervention, kinetic visual acuity (p < 0.05), accommodation facility (p < 0.01), and uncorrected distance visual acuity (p < 0.01)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChildren's Physical and Motor Development · Ophthalmology and Visual Impairment Studies · Tactile and Sensory Interactions
