Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Stephanstr. 1A, 04103, Leipzig, Germany,
Psychol Res. 2012 Jul;76(4):525-41. doi: 10.1007/s00426-011-0404-x. Epub 2011 Dec 24.
A large body of evidence suggests that action execution and action observation share a common representational domain. To date, little is known about age-related changes in these action representations that are assumed to support various abilities such as the prediction of observed actions. The purpose of the present study was to investigate (a) how age affects the ability to predict the time course of observed actions; and (b) whether and to what extent sensorimotor expertise attenuates age-related declines in prediction performance. In a first experiment, older adults predicted the time course of familiar everyday actions less precisely than younger adults. In a second experiment, younger and older figure skating experts as well as age-matched novices were asked to predict the time course of figure skating elements and simple movement exercises. Both young age and sensorimotor expertise had a positive influence on prediction performance of figure skating elements. The expertise-related benefit did not show a transfer to movement exercises. Together, the results suggest a specific decline of action representations in the aging mind. However, extensive sensorimotor experience seems to enable experts to represent actions from their domain of expertise more precisely even in older age.
大量证据表明,动作执行和动作观察共享一个共同的表象领域。迄今为止,人们对这些动作表象随年龄变化的了解甚少,这些动作表象被认为支持各种能力,例如对观察到的动作的预测。本研究的目的是调查(a)年龄如何影响预测观察到的动作时间过程的能力;以及(b)运动知觉专长是否以及在多大程度上减轻了预测表现随年龄增长而下降的程度。在第一个实验中,老年人预测熟悉的日常动作的时间过程不如年轻人准确。在第二个实验中,要求年轻和年长的花样滑冰专家以及年龄匹配的新手预测花样滑冰动作和简单运动练习的时间过程。年轻年龄和运动知觉专长都对花样滑冰动作的预测表现产生了积极影响。与专长相关的益处并没有转移到运动练习上。总的来说,研究结果表明,随着年龄的增长,动作表象在衰老的大脑中会出现特定的衰退。然而,广泛的运动知觉经验似乎使专家能够更准确地表现出他们专长领域的动作,即使是在老年时。