Brahms Markus, Heinzel Stephan, Rapp Michael, Reisner Volker, Wahmkow Gunnar, Rimpel Jérôme, Schauenburg Gesche, Stelzel Christine, Granacher Urs
Division of Training and Movement Sciences, Research Focus Cognition Sciences, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany.
Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
J Cogn. 2021 Mar 10;4(1):20. doi: 10.5334/joc.146.
Older adults exhibit impaired cognitive and balance performance, particularly under multi-task conditions, which can be improved through training. Compatibility of modality mappings in cognitive tasks (i.e., match between stimulus modality and anticipated sensory effects of motor responses), modulates physical and cognitive dual-task costs. However, the effects of modality specific training programs have not been evaluated yet. Here, we tested the effects of cognitive-postural multi-tasking training on the ability to coordinate task mappings under high postural demands in healthy older adults. Twenty-one adults aged 65-85 years were assigned to one of two groups. While group 1 performed cognitive-postural triple-task training with compatible modality mappings (i.e., visual-manual and auditory-vocal dual n-back tasks), group 2 performed the same tasks with incompatible modality mappings (i.e., visual-vocal and auditory-manual n-back tasks). Throughout the 6-weeks balance training intervention, working-memory load was gradually increased while base-of-support was reduced. Before training (T0), after a 6-week passive control period (T1), and immediately after the intervention (T2), participants performed spatial dual one-back tasks in semi-tandem stance position. Our results indicate improved working-memory performance and reduced dual-task costs for both groups after the passive control period, but no training-specific performance gains. Furthermore, balance performance did not improve in response to training. Notably, the cohort demonstrated meaningful interindividual variability in training responses. Our findings raise questions about practice effects and age-related heterogeneity of training responses following cognitive-motor training. Following multi-modal balance training, neither compatible nor incompatible modality mappings had an impact on the observed outcomes.
老年人表现出认知和平衡能力受损,尤其是在多任务条件下,而通过训练可以改善这种情况。认知任务中模态映射的兼容性(即刺激模态与运动反应预期感觉效果之间的匹配)会调节身体和认知双重任务成本。然而,特定模态训练计划的效果尚未得到评估。在此,我们测试了认知-姿势多任务训练对健康老年人在高姿势需求下协调任务映射能力的影响。21名65至85岁的成年人被分配到两个组中的一组。第1组进行具有兼容模态映射的认知-姿势三重任务训练(即视觉-手动和听觉-发声双重n-back任务),而第2组进行具有不兼容模态映射的相同任务(即视觉-发声和听觉-手动n-back任务)。在为期6周的平衡训练干预过程中,工作记忆负荷逐渐增加,同时支撑面减小。在训练前(T0)、6周的被动控制期后(T1)以及干预后立即(T2),参与者在半串联站立姿势下执行空间双重单背任务。我们的结果表明,在被动控制期后,两组的工作记忆表现均有所改善,双重任务成本降低,但没有特定训练带来的表现提升。此外,平衡能力并未因训练而提高。值得注意的是,该队列在训练反应方面表现出有意义的个体间差异。我们的研究结果引发了关于认知-运动训练后的练习效果和与年龄相关的训练反应异质性的问题。在多模式平衡训练后,兼容或不兼容的模态映射对观察到的结果均无影响。