Abstract

BackgroundThe control of an upright stance in humans is important in medicine, psychology, and physiology. The maintenance of upright stance balance depends not only on sensory information from proprioceptive, vestibular, cutaneous, and visual sources but also on cognitive resources. The present study investigated the effects of cognitive tasks while standing with eyes open on upright stance balance in adolescents. We hypothesized that performing a cognitive task while standing with eyes open would increase body sway among these adolescents and that the upright posture would thus become less stable.MethodsA static balance assessment system comprising a force platform connected to a computer was used to evaluate the stability of the upright stance among 21 healthy adolescents under six conditions: no cognitive task, a relatively easy cognitive task, or the same cognitive task made more difficult, with each task being performed while the eyes were open and again while the eyes were closed. The participants performed mental calculations as fast as possible by subtracting either 3 or 18 from a random three-digit number continuously, for the simple cognitive task or the difficult cognitive task, respectively. Each calculation was completed within 10 s. The evaluation indexes used to measure upright posture stability were the root mean square (RMS) of the total body sway in the mediolateral and anteroposterior directions, the mean velocity (MV) value of the total body sway, and the Romberg quotient (RQ) of these values.ResultsThe RMS (p < 0.01) and MV (p < 0.01) values of the upright posture sway were lower when participants performed no cognitive task and their eyes were open than when their eyes were closed. When their eyes were open, compared with no cognitive task, the values of the measures evaluating upright posture sway were higher, meaning the stance was less stable, while performing either the simple or the more difficult cognitive task (RMS: simple task, p < 0.01; difficult task, p < 0.05; MV: simple task, p < 0.01; difficult task, p < 0.01) although no significant differences were detected for the RMS or MV values between the simple and more difficult cognitive tasks. The RQs for both the RMS and the total MV values of the upright posture sway during performance of the difficult cognitive task were significantly lower than when the participants performed no task.ConclusionPerformance of a cognitive task significantly reduced the upright posture balance in adolescents during eyes open although increased task difficulty did not show a greater effect. The interference between the performance of a cognitive task and the visual control of an upright stance may be attributable in part to cognitive and visual processing streams competing for common central resources, consistent with the Multiple Resource Theory of information processing.

Highlights

  • Upright walking is arguably considered uniquely human

  • For upright posture sway in the ML direction, the repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) results showed that the main effects of both the visual (F(1,20) = 9.86, p = 0.005), and cognitive (F(2,40) = 17.01, p < 0.001) factors were significant, as was their interaction (F(2,40) = 3.5, p = 0.04)

  • The post hoc analysis showed that the upright posture sway amplitude when participants performed no cognitive task was smaller with the eyes open than with the eyes closed (p < 0.01)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Upright walking is arguably considered uniquely human. Controlling posture stability is considered the premise and basis of other kinds of action behaviors. Recent studies have concluded that balance maintenance in the upright body position is not entirely automated It depends on sensory information from proprioceptive, vestibular, cutaneous, and visual sources (Ceyte et al, 2014; Lakhani & Mansfield, 2015; Manor et al, 2010), and requires a large amount of cognitive resources (Chong et al, 2010; Polskaia et al, 2015). We hypothesized that performing a cognitive task while standing with eyes open would increase body sway among these adolescents and that the upright posture would become less stable. The RMS (p < 0.01) and MV (p < 0.01) values of the upright posture sway were lower when participants performed no cognitive task and their eyes were open than when their eyes were closed. The interference between the performance of a cognitive task and the visual control of an upright stance may be attributable in part to cognitive and

Methods
Results
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