Age-specific walking speed during locomotor adaptation leads to more generalization across contexts.

bioRxiv

Sensorimotor Learning Laboratory, Department of Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, 15260.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research indicates that older adults are better at generalizing their walking patterns across different environments compared to younger adults, but they did so at a comfortable walking speed for their age.
  • This study investigated how the interaction of age and walking speed affects the generalization of walking patterns learned on a split-belt treadmill to overground walking.
  • Findings revealed that older adults excel in generalization at slower speeds, while younger adults perform better at faster speeds, suggesting that comfortable walking speeds enhance the ability to apply newly learned motor patterns outside of training scenarios.

Article Abstract

Previous work has shown that compared with young adults, older adults generalize their walking patterns more across environments that impose different motor demands (i.e., split-belt treadmill vs. overground). However, in this previous study, all participants walked at a speed that was more comfortable for older adults than young participants, which leads to the question of whether young adults would generalize more their walking patterns than older adults when exposed to faster speeds that are more comfortable for them. To address this question, we examined the interaction between healthy aging and walking speed on the generalization of a pattern learned on a split-belt treadmill (i.e., legs moving at different speeds) to overground. We hypothesized that walking speed during split-belt walking regulates the generalization of walking patterns in an age-specific manner. To this end, groups of young (<30 y/o) and older (65+ y/o) adults adapted their gait on a split-belt treadmill at either slower or faster walking speeds. We assessed the generalization of movements between the groups by quantifying their aftereffects during overground walking, where larger overground aftereffects represent more generalization, and zero aftereffects represent no generalization. We found an interaction between age and walking speed in the generalization of walking patterns. More specifically, older adults generalized more when adapted at slower speeds, whereas younger adults did so when adapted at faster speeds. These results suggest that comfortable walking speeds lead to more generalization of newly acquired motor patterns beyond the training contexts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10461905PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.08.10.552802DOI Listing

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