Using a coloring activity to identify children’s development of visual–motor integration: an application of artificial intelligence
Tzu-Yun Huang, Kuan-Lin Chen, Gong-Hong Lin, Chien-Yu Huang

TL;DR
This study uses a coloring activity and AI to assess children's visual-motor integration skills, showing promising results for early screening.
Contribution
The novel use of AI models (SVM and XGBoost) with a coloring activity to evaluate children's visual-motor integration development.
Findings
The AI model achieved 86.2% accuracy in training data for predicting VMI developmental status.
The model showed good performance on testing data with 80.20% accuracy and 81.71% specificity.
Combining coloring activities with AI has potential as a screening tool for visual-motor integration.
Abstract
Visual–motor integration (VMI) is an important indicator in children with learning disabilities. We aimed to use performance in a coloring activity to identify children’s VMI developmental status. A sample of 505 preschool children (mean = 57.64, SD = 11.10) were recruited. Among them, data from 404 and 101 children were used as the training and testing data, respectively. The Beery–Buktenica Developmental Test of Visual–motor Integration, fourth Edition, (VMI-4) was used as an indicator for the model of artificial intelligence (AI). The total scores of the VMI-4 were calculated, and then based on the children’s age, the total scores were transferred into standard scores and the developmental status of visual–motor integration. The AI model comprised a regression model and classification model to predict the developmental status rated by the VMI-4. In the training data, we found that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutism Spectrum Disorder Research · Hearing Impairment and Communication · Children's Physical and Motor Development
