Age-related deterioration of coordinated interlimb behavior

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Abstract

Younger and older participants performed two-limb coordination patterns of homologous (similar) and nonhomologous (dissimilar) effectors during 1:1 synchronization, according to the in-phase or anti-phase mode. The aim of the study was to examine age-related changes during the production of these basic movement patterns and their relative stability difference. The findings revealed that the aging process modulated the coordination dynamics as a function of effector system characteristics. Whereas the homologous system was resistant to age-related deficits, movements of the nonhomologous system showed coordinative degradation that was most apparent during execution of the anti-phase mode. The latter performance regression is argued to be an expression of age-dependent declines in cognitive regulation and afferent information processing. This implies that deterioration in coordinated behavior across the life span may be strongly task dependent because of a combined effect of cognitive and sensory components.

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Serrien, D. J., Swinnen, S. P., & Stelmach, G. E. (2000). Age-related deterioration of coordinated interlimb behavior. Journals of Gerontology - Series B Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 55(5), P295–P303. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronb/55.5.P295

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