Optimal feedback control theory suggests that control of movement is focused on movement dimensions that are important for the task's success. The current study tested the hypotheses that age effects would emerge in the control of only specific movement components and that these components would be linked to the task relevance. Fifty healthy volunteers, 25 young and 25 older adults, performed a 80s-tandem stance while their postural movements were recorded using a standard motion capture system. The postural movements were decomposed by a principal component analysis into one-dimensional movement components, PM, whose control was assessed through two variables, N and σ, which characterized the tightness and the regularity of the neuro-muscular control, respectively. The older volunteers showed less tight and more irregular control in PM (N: -9.2%, = 0.007; σ: +14.3.0%, = 0.017) but tighter control in PM and PM (N: +4.7%, = 0.020; N: +2.5%, = 0.043; σ: -8.8%, = 0.025). These results suggest that aging effects alter the postural control system not as a whole, but emerge in specific, task relevant components. The findings of the current study thus support the hypothesis that the minimal intervention principle, as described in the context of optimal feedback control (OFC), may be relevant when assessing aging effects on postural control.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5807376PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2018.00022DOI Listing

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