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Aging and sensitivity to illusory target motion with or without secondary tasks

Authors :
Anne-Marie Brouwer
Eli Brenner
Petra C. Siemonsma
Jan B. F. van Erp
Alix L. de Dieuleveult
Organic Chemistry
Sensorimotor Control
IBBA
AMS - Ageing and Morbidity
Source :
De Dieuleveult, A L, Brouwer, A M, Siemonsma, P C, Van Erp, J B F & Brenner, E 2018, ' Aging and sensitivity to illusory target motion with or without secondary tasks ', Multisensory Research, vol. 31, no. 3-4, pp. 227-249 . https://doi.org/10.1163/22134808-00002596, Multisensory Research, Multisensory Research, 31(3-4), 227-249. Brill, Multisensory research, 31(3-4), 227-249. Brill
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Older individuals seem to find it more difficult to ignore inaccurate sensory cues than younger individuals. We examined whether this could be quantified using an interception task. Twenty healthy young adults (age 18–34) and twenty-four healthy older adults (age 60–82) were asked to tap on discs that were moving downwards on a screen with their finger. Moving the background to the left made the discs appear to move more to the right. Moving the background to the right made them appear to move more to the left. The discs disappeared before the finger reached the screen, so participants had to anticipate how the target would continue to move. We examined how misjudging the disc’s motion when the background moves influenced tapping. Participants received veridical feedback about their performance, so their sensitivity to the illusory motion indicates to what extent they could ignore the task-irrelevant visual information. We expected older adults to be more sensitive to the illusion than younger adults. To investigate whether sensorimotor or cognitive load would increase this sensitivity, we also asked participants to do the task while standing on foam or counting tones. Background motion influenced older adults more than younger adults. The secondary tasks did not increase the background’s influence. Older adults might be more sensitive to the moving background because they find it more difficult to ignore irrelevant sensory information in general, but they may rely more on vision because they have less reliable proprioceptive and vestibular information.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22134794
Volume :
31
Issue :
3-4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Multisensory research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b59b446559e7674372f8c04fb7105e8