11th Edition

Human Motor Development A Lifespan Approach

By V. Gregory Payne, Larry D. Isaacs Copyright 2025
    546 Pages 198 Color Illustrations
    by Routledge

    546 Pages 198 Color Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Human Motor Development: A Lifespan Approach, Eleventh Edition provides an overview of the academic field of study known as human motor development, the examination of lifelong changes in human movement. The book uses a holistic approach and emphasizes the importance of intellectual, social, and physical development and their impact on human motor development at all ages. The unique approach of this book includes the relationships between motor development and critical interactions with cognitive, social, and physical changes across the lifespan.

    Organized into five parts, the book examines key topics in motor development, including the relationship between cognitive and social development and motor development, factors affecting development, changes across the lifespan, and assessment in motor development, with special attention being applied to adulthood and older adulthood, given the increasing numbers of people in those age groups worldwide. Each chapter includes chapter objectives, a summary, a list of key concepts, questions for reflection, a list of related online resources, and an extensive reference list.

    Highly illustrated and written for student accessibility by providing access to a fully updated companion website, which includes laboratory exercises, an instructors’ manual, a test bank, and lecture slides, Human Motor Development: A Lifespan Approach is essential reading for students of motor control and development, kinesiology, and human performance and for students interested in physical therapy, physical education, and exercise science.

    Part I: An Overview of Development

    1. Introduction to Motor Development

    2. Cognitive and Motor Development

    3. Social and Motor Development

    Part II: Factors That Affect Development

    4. Prenatal Development Factors

    5. Effects of Early Stimulation and Deprivation

    Part III: Physical Changes across the Lifespan

    6. Growth and Maturation

    7. Physiological Changes: Health‑Related Physical Fitness

    8. Movement and the Changing Senses

    Part IV: Movement across the Lifespan

    9. Infant Reflexes and Stereotypies

    10. Voluntary Movements of Infancy

    11. Fine Motor Development

    12. Fundamental Locomotion Skills of Childhood

    13. Fundamental Object‑Control Skills of Childhood

    14. Youth Sports

    15. Movement in Adulthood

    Part V: Assessing Motor Development

    16. Assessment

    Biography

    V. Gregory Payne is a Professor Emeritus of Kinesiology at San Jose State University (SJSU). He formerly served as the Associate Dean for Research in the College of Applied Sciences and Arts and Chair of the Department of Kinesiology. Payne earned a BS at Western Illinois University and later received that institution’s Alumni Achievement Award. He earned an MA at the University of Iowa and a PED at Indiana University with a specialization in human motor development. Payne was a Peace Corps Volunteer after his undergraduate degree, working for the Venezuelan Ministry of Education. He has produced over 170 publications, including numerous refereed articles and 19 editions of five books, and has made nearly 300 presentations around the world. Payne was an International Professor of the Year at SJSU and is a Distinguished Honorary Professor at the Shenyang Sport University, China. He received the Distinguished Service Award from the California Governor’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports and the prestigious Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport Research Writing Award. He has held offices in several organizations, including NASPE President and Chair of the Motor Development Academy. He is an elected Fellow of the National Academy of Kinesiology, a group generally considered the top leaders and scholars in kinesiology, and the Research Consortium of AAHPERD/SHAPE, has chaired two editorial boards, and has reviewed for numerous journals. He was a member of the task force that developed the NASPE National Physical Education Standards. Payne lives in San Jose, California, with his wife, Linda, and their dog Jake, who is a mature runner, jumper, and catcher (Frisbee specialist).

    Larry D. Isaacs is a Professor Emeritus and former Director of the Exercise Physiology Program, Department of Biological Sciences, College of Science and Mathematics, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio, USA. He has published numerous scholarly articles and has authored, co‑authored, and contributed to 21 textbooks. In retirement, he continues to serve on several editorial boards. Additionally, he has attained certification with the American College of Sports Medicine (Certified Exercise Physiologist) and was awarded the Research Fellow Status by AAHPERD/SHAPE. In addition, he has received the Wright State University Presidential Recognition Award for Research. After his retirement from Wright State University, he continued to work part‑time for a period of 17 years as a clinical exercise physiologist at Hilton Head Hospital, Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, where he worked with both cardiac and pulmonary patients. He now enjoys his hobbies, which include writing, golfing, biking, and photography.