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Normal aging reduces motor synergies in manual pointing

Author

  • Julius Verrel
  • Martin Lövdén
  • Ulman Lindenberger

Summary, in English

Depending upon its organization, movement variability may reflect poor or flexible control of a motor task. We studied adult age-related differences in the structure of postural variability in manual pointing using the uncontrolled manifold (UCM) method. Participants from 2 age groups (younger: 20-30 years; older: 70-80 years; 12 subjects per group) completed a total of 120 pointing trials to 2 different targets presented according to 3 schedules: blocked, alternating, and random. The age groups were similar with respect to basic kinematic variables, end point precision, as well as the accuracy of the biomechanical forward model of the arm. Following the uncontrolled manifold approach, goal-equivalent and nongoal-equivalent components of postural variability (goal-equivalent variability [GEV] and nongoal-equivalent variability [NGEV]) were determined for 5 time points of the movements (start, 10%, 50%, 90%, and end) and used to define a synergy index reflecting the flexibility/stability aspect of motor synergies. Toward the end of the movement, younger adults showed higher synergy indexes than older adults. Effects of target schedule were not reliable. We conclude that normal aging alters the organization of common multidegree-of-freedom movements, with older adults making less flexible use of motor abundance than younger adults. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Publishing year

2012

Language

English

Publication/Series

Neurobiology of Aging

Volume

33

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Psychology

Keywords

  • Movement
  • Pointing
  • Variability
  • Coordination
  • Uncontrolled manifold
  • Aging

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1558-1497