Publication | Closed Access
Cognitive demands of executing postural reactions: does aging impede attention switching?
123
Citations
18
References
2001
Year
Upright PostureNeuropsychologyCognitionMotor ControlAttentionPostural ReactionsNew Dual-task ParadigmSocial SciencesMovement AnalysisKinesiologyCognitive DemandsDeviation OnsetPostural PerturbationExecutive FunctionCognitive NeuroscienceHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceVisuomotor LearningRehabilitationPhysical TherapySensorimotor TransformationAction MonitoringProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceHuman Movement
A new dual-task paradigm was used to investigate age-related differences in attentional dynamics during rapid balancing reactions evoked by small, unpredictable antero-posterior platform movements. The perturbations were delivered while subjects performed a continuous visuo-motor pursuit-tracking task. Onset of significant deviation in tracking was inferred to indicate switching of attentional resources between tracking and balancing tasks. Although tracking deviation was equally likely to occur subsequent to postural perturbation in healthy young and older adults, deviation onset was delayed, on average, by 67% (123 ms) in the older subjects. Delay in onset of tracking deviation correlated with subsequent delay in generating the peak stabilizing postural response at the ankle. These results suggest that impaired attentional dynamics may exacerbate postural instability in older adults.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1