Abstract

The tendency to think about or consciously control automated movements (i.e., movement-specific reinvestment) is a crucial factor associated with falling in the elderly. We tested whether elderly people’s movement-specific reinvestment depended on their past falling history and whether it can predict future error-prone movements. In a longitudinal pre-post design, we assessed n = 21 elderly people’s (Mage = 84.38 years, SD = 5.68) falling history, movement-specific reinvestment (i.e., Movement-Specific Reinvestment Scale), and physical functioning (i.e., Short-Physical-Performance Battery). Following a baseline assessment, participants reported their movement behavior in a daily diary for 2 months, after which we assessed their movement-specific reinvestment and physical functioning again (longitudinal, pre-post design). Results revealed, first, that participants’ movement self-consciousness score was fairly stable, while their conscious-motor-processing score was less stable. Second, conscious motor processing was higher in participants who had fallen as opposed to those who had not fallen in the past. Third, conscious motor processing predicted error-prone future movement behavior reported in the daily diary. For identifying individuals who are more prone to fall, caregivers, rehabilitation staff, or doctors could apply the Movement-Specific Reinvestment Scale to screen elderly people’s psychomotor behavior. Based on conscious motor processing, monitoring cognitions could be tailored in theory-based, individual interventions involving both cognitive and motor training.

Highlights

  • The tendency to think about or consciously control automated movements is a crucial factor associated with falling in the elderly

  • In addition to examining the association of movement-specific reinvestment to past falling [21,22,34], our study focuses on the relation of movement-specific reinvestment to future movement behavior and its predictive power regarding future error-prone movements

  • The results hint at movement-specific reinvestment being a relevant construct explaining the psychological, cognitive control of movement execution and its relation to impaired motor function

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Summary

Introduction

The tendency to think about or consciously control automated movements (i.e., movementspecific reinvestment) is a crucial factor associated with falling in the elderly. Conscious motor processing predicted error-prone future movement behavior reported in the daily diary. Falls often lead to severe injuries that hinder older people’s ability to keep up their everyday life routines, mobility, or independent living, all key components of high quality of life [3,7,8,9,10]. This is why the prevention of falls is highly relevant for aging individuals as well as for aging societies. Detecting deficits in motor control and related error-prone movements published maps and institutional affiliations

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