Dual-task and electrophysiological markers of executive cognitive processing in older adult gait and fall-risk

The role of cognition is becoming increasingly central to our understanding of the complexity of walking gait. In particular, higher-level executive functions are suggested to play a key role in gait and fall-risk, but the specific underlying neurocognitive processes remain unclear. Here, we report...

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Published inFrontiers in human neuroscience Vol. 9; p. 200
Main Authors Walshe, Elizabeth A, Patterson, Matthew R, Commins, Seán, Roche, Richard A P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Research Foundation 17.04.2015
Frontiers Media S.A
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Summary:The role of cognition is becoming increasingly central to our understanding of the complexity of walking gait. In particular, higher-level executive functions are suggested to play a key role in gait and fall-risk, but the specific underlying neurocognitive processes remain unclear. Here, we report two experiments which investigated the cognitive and neural processes underlying older adult gait and falls. Experiment 1 employed a dual-task (DT) paradigm in young and older adults, to assess the relative effects of higher-level executive function tasks (n-Back, Serial Subtraction and visuo-spatial Clock task) in comparison to non-executive distracter tasks (motor response task and alphabet recitation) on gait. All DTs elicited changes in gait for both young and older adults, relative to baseline walking. Significantly greater DT costs were observed for the executive tasks in the older adult group. Experiment 2 compared normal walking gait, seated cognitive performances and concurrent event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in healthy young and older adults, to older adult fallers. No significant differences in cognitive performances were found between fallers and non-fallers. However, an initial late-positivity, considered a potential early P3a, was evident on the Stroop task for older non-fallers, which was notably absent in older fallers. We argue that executive control functions play a prominent role in walking and gait, but the use of neurocognitive processes as a predictor of fall-risk needs further investigation.
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Edited by: Pierfilippo De Sanctis, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, USA
Reviewed by: Annalisa Setti, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland; Brenda Malcolm, Graduate Center-CUNY, USA
ISSN:1662-5161
1662-5161
DOI:10.3389/fnhum.2015.00200