Motor
Standardised instruments for assessing the motor domain in young children
The motor developmental domain (ICF b7) in young children is assessed with several norm- or criterion-referenced instruments: Bayley-4 motor scales, PDMS-2, AIMS, TIMP, MABC-2 and GMFM-66/88, plus screening adjuncts like ASQ-3 and the Prechtl GMA. Choice depends on age band and whether the purpose is discriminative, predictive or evaluative. These tools inform but never replace clinician-led assessment, and any AbilityScore® or diagnosis is formed only at a Pinnacle centre.
When you want to map how a young child reaches, rolls, sits, walks and manipulates, the right instrument turns observation into reproducible data.
In short
Several well-validated, norm-referenced instruments assess the motor domain (ICF b7 — neuromusculoskeletal and movement-related functions) in young children, spanning gross and fine motor sub-domains. The most widely cited in research and clinical practice are the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (Bayley-4), the Peabody Developmental Motor Scales (PDMS-2), the Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS), the Movement Assessment Battery for Children (MABC-2), the Test of Infant Motor Performance (TIMP) and the Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM-66/88) for children with cerebral palsy. Instrument choice depends on age band, purpose (screening, discriminative, or evaluative) and the motor construct of interest.Mapping instruments to purpose and age
For a researcher, it helps to organise tools by psychometric function and developmental window:- AIMS — observational, norm-referenced; 0–18 months (until independent walking). Discriminative and evaluative for early gross motor maturation, sensitive to atypical postural control.
- TIMP — 34 weeks post-menstrual age to ~4 months; designed for at-risk and preterm infants, strong predictive validity for later motor outcome.
- Bayley-4 (Motor Scale) — 16 days–42 months; separate fine and gross motor sub-scales, widely used as a reference standard in longitudinal cohorts.
- PDMS-2 — birth–5 years; six sub-tests yielding Gross Motor, Fine Motor and Total Motor Quotients; both discriminative and evaluative.
- MABC-2 — 3–16 years (Band 1 from age 3); identifies and quantifies motor coordination difficulty, commonly paired with DCD research.
- GMFM-66/88 — evaluative, criterion-referenced; the standard outcome measure for gross motor change in cerebral palsy, often reported with GMFCS stratification.
- Adjuncts — the Prechtl General Movements Assessment (GMA) for early neurological risk, and DAYC-2 or ASQ-3 motor sub-scales for screening-level surveillance.
For rigour, distinguish discriminative (does this child differ from norms?), predictive (will outcome differ?) and evaluative (has motor function changed?) intent, and report instrument version, normative sample relevance to the Indian context, and inter-rater reliability for your design.
When clinical referral, not just measurement, is indicated
Where screening or research data flag asymmetry, persistent primitive reflexes, regression, marked tone abnormality, or loss of acquired skills, route promptly to clinical paediatric and developmental review — measurement instruments inform but do not replace diagnostic care.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an instrument score alone. The AbilityScore® is a clinician-administered structured assessment that situates a child against their own baseline across domains including motor; standardised tools such as those above complement, rather than substitute for, this clinician judgement. Our work draws on 2.5 billion+ data points and 25 million+ therapy sessions across 70+ centres. Explore our occupational therapy and physiotherapy pathways, and see what the AbilityScore is and how it's calculated.Trusted sources
WHO ICF framework, neuromusculoskeletal and movement-related functions (b7); AAP and HealthyChildren guidance on developmental surveillance and motor milestones; CDC developmental milestone resources. Instrument selection should follow current peer-reviewed psychometric reviews for the chosen population.Next step — Designing a motor-outcome study or service pathway? Partner with Pinnacle to align standardised instruments with clinician-led AbilityScore® assessment.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch for asymmetry of movement, persistent primitive reflexes, marked tone abnormality, failure to reach age-expected gross or fine motor milestones, or loss of previously acquired skills — these warrant prompt clinical paediatric and developmental review alongside any standardised testing.
Try this at home
When selecting an instrument, match it to your age band and intent: AIMS or TIMP for infants and at-risk preterms, Bayley-4 or PDMS-2 across early childhood, MABC-2 for coordination from age 3, and GMFM-66/88 for evaluative change in cerebral palsy.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Which instrument is best for infants under 4 months?
For very young and preterm infants, the Test of Infant Motor Performance (TIMP), validated from around 34 weeks post-menstrual age to about 4 months, offers strong predictive validity, while the Prechtl General Movements Assessment provides complementary early neurological risk information.
What distinguishes the Bayley-4 motor scale from the PDMS-2?
The Bayley-4 motor scale (16 days–42 months) is frequently used as a reference standard in longitudinal cohorts and yields fine and gross motor sub-scales. The PDMS-2 (birth–5 years) provides six sub-tests and separate Gross, Fine and Total Motor Quotients, making it useful for more detailed motor profiling and as an evaluative measure.
Do standardised motor instruments diagnose a condition?
No. They quantify motor performance against norms or criteria and inform clinical reasoning, but a diagnosis and any AbilityScore® are formed only by a qualified clinician at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, integrating history, observation and multi-domain assessment.