Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife, Harvard Medical School, 1200 Centre St., Boston, MA 02131, USA.
Hoglund Biomedical Imaging Center, University of Kansas Medical School, Kansas City, KS 66160, USA.
Sensors (Basel). 2022 Jul 26;22(15):5594. doi: 10.3390/s22155594.
The pupillary response reflects mental effort (or cognitive workload) during cognitive and/or motor tasks including standing postural control. EEG has been shown to be a non-invasive measure to assess the cortical involvement of postural control. The purpose of this study was to understand the effect of increasing postural task difficulty on the pupillary response and EEG outcomes and their relationship in young adults. Fifteen adults completed multiple trials of standing: eyes open, eyes open while performing a dual-task (auditory two-back), eyes occluded, and eyes occluded with a dual-task. Participants stood on a force plate and wore an eye tracker and 256-channel EEG cap during the conditions. The power spectrum was analyzed for absolute theta (4−7 Hz), alpha (8−13 Hz), and beta (13−30 Hz) frequency bands. Increased postural task difficulty was associated with greater pupillary response (p < 0.001) and increased posterior region alpha power (p = 0.001) and fronto-central region theta/beta power ratio (p = 0.01). Greater pupillary response correlated with lower posterior EEG alpha power during eyes-occluded standing with (r = −0.67, p = 0.01) and without (r = −0.69, p = 0.01) dual-task. A greater pupillary response was associated with lower CoP displacement in the anterior−posterior direction during dual-task eyes-occluded standing (r = −0.60, p = 0.04). The pupillary response and EEG alpha power appear to capture similar cortical processes that are increasingly utilized during progressively more challenging postural task conditions. As the pupillary response also correlated with task performance, this measurement may serve as a valuable stand-alone or adjunct tool to understand the underlying neurophysiological mechanisms of postural control.
瞳孔反应反映了认知和/或运动任务期间的脑力努力(或认知工作量),包括站立姿势控制。脑电图已被证明是一种非侵入性的测量方法,可评估姿势控制的皮质参与。本研究的目的是了解增加姿势任务难度对瞳孔反应和脑电图结果的影响及其在年轻成年人中的关系。15 名成年人完成了多次站立试验:睁眼、睁眼时执行双重任务(听觉双任务)、闭眼和闭眼时执行双重任务。参与者在站立时在力板上佩戴眼动追踪器和 256 通道 EEG 帽。对绝对 theta(4-7 Hz)、alpha(8-13 Hz)和 beta(13-30 Hz)频段的功率谱进行了分析。随着姿势任务难度的增加,瞳孔反应增加(p < 0.001),后区 alpha 功率增加(p = 0.001)和额-中央区 theta/beta 功率比增加(p = 0.01)。在闭眼站立时,瞳孔反应与后区 EEG alpha 功率降低相关(r = -0.67,p = 0.01)和没有(r = -0.69,p = 0.01)双重任务。在双重任务闭眼站立时,瞳孔反应与 CoP 在前后方向上的位移减小相关(r = -0.60,p = 0.04)。瞳孔反应和 EEG alpha 功率似乎都捕捉到了类似的皮质过程,这些过程在越来越具有挑战性的姿势任务条件下被越来越多地利用。由于瞳孔反应也与任务表现相关,因此这种测量方法可能是一种有价值的独立或辅助工具,可以帮助理解姿势控制的潜在神经生理机制。