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Aging Effect on Visuomotor Adaptation: Mediated by Cognitive Decline

  • Na Li
  • , Guopeng Chen
  • , Yong Xie
  • , Zhongting Chen*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The question of whether and how aging affects humans’ visuomotor adaptation remains controversial. This study investigates how the effect of aging on visuomotor adaptation is related to age-related cognitive declines. We compared the performance of 100 older people (age: 55–82 years) and 20 young adults (age: 18–27 years) on a visuomotor adaptation task and three cognition tasks. A decline in visuomotor adaptation of older people was well observed. However, this decline was not strongly correlated with chronological age increase but was associated to the age-related declines of cognitive functions and speed of motor planning. We then constructed a structural mediation model in which the declined cognitive resources mediated the effect of age increase on the decline in visuomotor adaptation. The data from the present study was well-explained by the mediation model. These findings indicate that the aging effect on visuomotor adaptation mainly reflects the age-related decline of cognitive functions, which results in insufficient explicit processing on visual perturbation during visuomotor control.

Original languageEnglish
Article number742928
JournalFrontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - 28 Oct 2021

Keywords

  • age-related cognitive decline
  • aging
  • motor planning
  • online motor control
  • visuomotor adaptation

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