Laboratory of Applied Biology and Neurophysiology, ULB Neuroscience Institute (UNI), Université libre de Bruxelles, 808 route de Lennik, 1070 Brussels, Belgium.
Laboratory of Applied Biology and Neurophysiology, ULB Neuroscience Institute (UNI), Université libre de Bruxelles, 808 route de Lennik, 1070 Brussels, Belgium.
Exp Gerontol. 2018 Jun;106:74-79. doi: 10.1016/j.exger.2018.02.022. Epub 2018 Feb 24.
This study assessed the influence of attention division, working memory and executive function on stair ascent and descent in young and older adults. Twenty young (25.5 ± 2.1 yrs) and 20 older adults (68.4 ± 5.4 yrs) ascended and descended a 3-step staircase with no simultaneous cognitive task (single-motor task) or while performing a cognitive task (dual-task condition). The cognitive task involved either 1) recalling a word list of the subject's word-span minus 2 words (SPAN-2) to assess the attention division effect, 2) a word list of subject's word-span (SPAN-O) to assess the working memory effect, or 3) recalling in alphabetical order, a word list of the subject's word-span (SPAN-A) to assess the executive function effect. Word-span corresponds to the longest string of words that can be recalled correctly. The duration of ascent and descent of stairs was used to assess the cognitive-motor interaction. Stair ascent and descent duration did not differ between age groups for the single-motor task, and was similar between single-motor task and SPAN-2 in both groups (p > 0.05). In contrast, stair ascent and descent duration increased with SPAN-O compared with SPAN-2 for both groups (p < 0.01). Stair ascent (p = 0.017) and descent (p = 0.008) were longer in SPAN-A than SPAN-O only in older adults. Healthy aging was not associated with a decrease in the capacity to perform motor-cognitive dual tasks that involved ascending and descending of stairs when the cognitive task only required working memory. However, the decrease in dual-task performance involving executive functioning may reflect a subclinical cognitive decline in healthy older adults.
本研究评估了注意力分配、工作记忆和执行功能对年轻人和老年人上下楼梯的影响。20 名年轻人(25.5±2.1 岁)和 20 名老年人(68.4±5.4 岁)在没有同时进行认知任务(单任务条件)或同时进行认知任务(双任务条件)的情况下上下 3 级楼梯。认知任务包括 1)回忆一个比受试者单词跨度少 2 个单词的单词列表(SPAN-2)以评估注意力分配效应,2)受试者单词跨度的单词列表(SPAN-O)以评估工作记忆效应,或 3)以字母顺序回忆受试者单词跨度的单词列表(SPAN-A)以评估执行功能效应。单词跨度对应可以正确回忆的最长字符串的单词。上下楼梯的持续时间用于评估认知运动交互作用。在单任务条件下,年龄组之间的楼梯上下时间没有差异,并且在两组中,单任务和 SPAN-2 之间的楼梯上下时间相似(p>0.05)。相比之下,与 SPAN-2 相比,两组的 SPAN-O 都增加了楼梯的上下时间(p<0.01)。与 SPAN-O 相比,仅在老年人中,SPAN-A 的楼梯上升(p=0.017)和下降(p=0.008)时间更长。当认知任务仅需要工作记忆时,健康老年人的上下楼梯的运动认知双重任务能力下降与认知能力下降无关。然而,涉及执行功能的双重任务表现下降可能反映了健康老年人亚临床认知能力下降。