Abstract

BackgroundLimited information processing capacity in the brain necessitates task prioritisation and subsequent adaptive behavioural strategies for the dual-task coordination of locomotion with severe concurrent cognitive loading. Commonly observed strategies include prioritisation of gait at the cost of reduced performance in the cognitive task. Alternatively alterations of gait parameters such as gait velocity have been reported presumably to free processing capacity for the benefit of performance in the cognitive task. The aim of this study was to describe the neuroanatomical correlates of adaptive behavioural strategies in cognitive-motor dual-tasking when the competition for information processing capacity is severe and may exceed individuals’ capacity limitations. MethodsDuring an fMRI experiment, 12 young adults performed slow continuous, auditorily paced bilateral anti-phase ankle dorsi-plantarflexion movements as an element of normal gait at .5Hz in single and dual task modes. The secondary task involved a visual, alphabetic N-back task with presentation rate jittered around .7Hz. The N-back task, which randomly occurred in 0-back or 2-back form, was modified into a silent counting task to avoid confounding motor responses at the cost of slightly increasing the task′s general coordinative complexity. Participants’ ankle movements were recorded using an optoelectronic motion capture system to derive kinematic parameters representing the stability of the movement timing and synchronization. Participants were instructed to perform both tasks as accurately as possible. ResultsIncreased processing complexity in the dual-task 2-back condition led to significant changes in movement parameters such as the average inter-response interval, the coefficient of variation of absolute asynchrony and the standard deviation of peak angular velocity. A regions-of-interest analysis indicated correlations between these parameters and local activations within the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) such that lower IFG activations coincided with performance decrements. ConclusionsDual-task interference effects show that the production of periodically timed ankle movements, taken as modelling elements of the normal gait cycle, draws on higher-level cognitive resources involved in working memory. The interference effect predominantly concerns the timing accuracy of the ankle movements. Reduced activations within regions of the left IFG, and in some respect also within the superior parietal lobule, were identified as one factor affecting the timing of periodic ankle movements resulting in involuntary ‘hastening’ during severe dual-task working memory load. This ‘hastening’ phenomenon may be an expression of re-automated locomotor control when higher-order cognitive processing capacity can no longer be allocated to the movements due to the demands of the cognitive task. The results of our study also propose the left IFG as a target region to improve performance during dual-task walking by techniques for non-invasive brain stimulation.

Highlights

  • Holding a conversation while walking is a form of multitasking which often occurs in normal daily life

  • As the dual-task 2-back condition showed statistical effects on specific movement parameters compared to the single-task motor and the dual-task 0-back conditions, we identified those clusters in the dual-task 2-back 2nd level main effects with a cluster significance level below .05 after false discovery rate (FDR) correction for multiple comparisons as our selected Regions of Interest (ROI)

  • We first examined the maximum range of ankle movements and determined that they did not differ between task conditions or body side

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Holding a conversation while walking is a form of multitasking which often occurs in normal daily life. Prioritisation of locomotion according to a ‘posture-first’ principle at the cost of exacerbated performance reductions in the cognitive task have been reported as well (Li, Lindenberger, Freund, & Baltes, 2001) These adaptive strategies have been observed predominantly in older adults, there is no reason to believe that they will not occur in younger adults too, provided significant competition for higher-order processing capacity between the motor and cognitive domains. Reduced activations within regions of the left IFG, and in some respect within the superior parietal lobule, were identified as one factor affecting the timing of periodic ankle movements resulting in involuntary ‘hastening’ during severe dual-task working memory load This ‘hastening’ phenomenon may be an expression of re-automated locomotor control when higher-order cognitive processing capacity can no longer be allocated to the movements due to the demands of the cognitive task. The results of our study propose the left IFG as a target region to improve performance during dual-task walking by techniques for non-invasive brain stimulation

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call