Dept. of Kinesiology, The Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA 16802, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2011 Dec;111(6):1671-80. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00760.2011. Epub 2011 Sep 29.
This study investigated the coordination and control strategies that the elderly adopt during a redundant finger force coordination task and how the amount of visual information regulates the coordination patterns. Three age groups (20-24, 65-69, and 75-79 yr) performed a bimanual asymmetric force task. Task asymmetry was manipulated via imposing different coefficients on the finger forces such that the weighted sum of the two index finger forces equaled the total force. The amount of visual information was manipulated by changing the visual information gain of the total force output. Two hypotheses were tested: the reduced adaptability hypothesis predicts that the elderly show less degree of force asymmetry between hands compared with young adults in the asymmetric coefficient conditions, whereas the compensatory hypothesis predicts that the elderly exhibit more asymmetric force coordination patterns with asymmetric coefficients. Under the compensatory hypothesis, two contrasting directions of force sharing strategies (i.e., more efficient coordination strategy and minimum variance strategy) are expected. A deteriorated task performance (high performance error and force variability) was found in the two elderly groups, but enhanced visual information improved the task performance in all age groups. With low visual information gain, the elderly showed reduced adaptability (i.e., less asymmetric forces between hands) to the unequal weighting coefficients, which supported the reduced adaptability hypothesis; however, the elderly revealed the same degree of adaptation as the young group under high visual gain. The findings are consistent with the notion that the age-related reorganization of force coordination and control patterns is mediated by visual information and, more generally, the interactive influence of multiple categories of constraints.
本研究调查了老年人在冗余手指力协调任务中采用的协调和控制策略,以及视觉信息的多少如何调节协调模式。三个年龄组(20-24 岁、65-69 岁和 75-79 岁)完成了一项双手不对称力量任务。通过对手指力施加不同的系数来操纵任务的不对称性,使得两个食指力的加权和等于总力。通过改变总力量输出的视觉信息增益来操纵视觉信息量。测试了两个假设:适应性降低假设预测,与年轻人相比,老年人在不对称系数条件下双手之间的力不对称性较小;而补偿性假设预测,老年人在不对称系数条件下表现出更不对称的力协调模式。根据补偿性假设,预计会有两种相反的力共享策略方向(即更有效的协调策略和最小方差策略)。在两个老年组中发现了任务表现的恶化(高绩效误差和力变异性),但所有年龄组的增强视觉信息都提高了任务表现。在低视觉信息增益下,老年人对不等权重系数的适应性降低(即双手之间的力不对称性降低),这支持了适应性降低的假设;然而,在高视觉增益下,老年人表现出与年轻人相同的适应程度。这些发现与以下观点一致,即与年龄相关的力量协调和控制模式的重组是由视觉信息介导的,更普遍地说,是由多种类别的约束的相互影响介导的。