Sarıçamlık Selin, Avcı Nizamettin Burak, Yiğit Öznur
Audiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, Atilim University, Ankara, Türkiye.
Audiology, Faculty of Health Sciences, Trakya University, Edirne, Türkiye.
Brain Behav. 2025 Aug;15(8):e70750. doi: 10.1002/brb3.70750.
Performing everyday tasks requires the use of multiple cognitive, sensory, and emotional systems. The interference of different variables in these multitasking systems affects our motor-balance system. This study was conducted to investigate how acoustic stimuli presented during a cognitive-motor dual task affect postural control in healthy young adults.
Fifty-four healthy participants (39 females, 15 males; total age 21.87±1.18, range 19-24) were randomly assigned to control (silent), noise (multi-talker babble), or music (Mozart-Jupiter) groups based on testing environment. During the Stroop test, conducted with acoustic stimuli, postural sway velocity was measured on firm and foam surfaces with eyes open. The dual-task effect was assessed using the Wilcoxon test, and group comparisons employed one-way ANOVA or Kruskal-Wallis tests. Independent t tests and Mann-Whitney U tests were used for two-group comparisons. Statistical significance was set at p<0.05 (Bonferroni-adjusted p<0.017).
The silent cognitive-motor dual task increased postural sway on firm (median increased from 0.18 to 0.26 deg/s) and foam (median increased from 0.21 to 0.32 deg/s) surfaces. Music did not significantly affect cognitive performance or postural sway compared to the control group. However, noise reduced postural sway on firm and foam surfaces compared to the control group but did not affect cognitive performance. There was no significant difference in average Stroop response times between the groups or between the firm and foam surface comparisons.
During inhibitory control tasks, cognitive effort prioritized in young people in easy-to-balance situations. Background noise affects motor-cognitive interaction, highlighting its potential for enhancing vestibular rehabilitation strategies in multitasking and guiding future research.
执行日常任务需要运用多种认知、感官和情感系统。这些多任务系统中不同变量的干扰会影响我们的运动平衡系统。本研究旨在调查在认知 - 运动双重任务期间呈现的听觉刺激如何影响健康年轻成年人的姿势控制。
根据测试环境,将54名健康参与者(39名女性,15名男性;总年龄21.87±1.18,范围19 - 24岁)随机分配到对照组(安静)、噪声组(多人交谈的嘈杂声)或音乐组(莫扎特《朱庇特交响曲》)。在进行伴有听觉刺激的斯特鲁普测试期间,测量睁眼状态下在坚实和泡沫表面上的姿势摇摆速度。使用威尔科克森检验评估双重任务效应,组间比较采用单因素方差分析或克鲁斯卡尔 - 沃利斯检验。两组比较采用独立t检验和曼 - 惠特尼U检验。统计学显著性设定为p<0.05(经邦费罗尼校正后p<0.017)。
安静的认知 - 运动双重任务增加了在坚实(中位数从0.18增加到0.26度/秒)和泡沫(中位数从0.21增加到0.32度/秒)表面上的姿势摇摆。与对照组相比,音乐对认知表现或姿势摇摆没有显著影响。然而,与对照组相比,噪声减少了在坚实和泡沫表面上的姿势摇摆,但不影响认知表现。各组之间或坚实与泡沫表面比较之间的平均斯特鲁普反应时间没有显著差异。
在抑制控制任务期间,在易于平衡的情况下年轻人优先考虑认知努力。背景噪声影响运动 - 认知交互,突出了其在多任务中增强前庭康复策略及指导未来研究的潜力。