Abstract

Visual exproprioception obtained from the lower visual field (LVF) is used to control locomotion on uneven terrain. Wearing a facial mask obstructs the LVF and can compromise gait control. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the effect of occluding the LVF when wearing a facial mask on gait control while walking and stepping into a hole in older adults. Fifteen older adults walked along a wooden walkway under two different surface conditions (without and with a hole [60 cm wide and long, with a depth of 9.5 cm] and three visual conditions (control, mask, and basketball goggles with an occluded LVF). We found that occlusion of the LVF with masks or goggles did not affect the adaptations necessary to step into a hole. Neither behavioral (gait speed, margin of stability, foot landing position) nor neuromuscular (EMG activation and co-activation) parameters were affected by either visual manipulation. Older adults used a downward head pitch strategy to compensate for visual obstruction and plan the anticipatory adjustments to step into the hole. The absence of lower limb visual exproprioception due to wearing a mask did not affect locomotion control when stepping into a hole in older adults. Older adults compensated for the obstruction of the LVF through head downward tilt, which allowed them to obtain visual information about the hole two steps ahead to make anticipatory locomotor adjustments.

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