Abstract

A hand mental rotation task (HMRT) is a task wherein a person judges whether an image of a rotated hand is of the right or left hand. Two performance strategies are expected to come into play when performing these tasks: a visual imagery (VI) strategy, in which an image is mentally rotated, and a motor imagery (MI) strategy, in which the movement of a person’s own hand is simulated. Although elderly people generally take some time to perform these tasks, ability differs greatly between individuals. The present study hypothesizes that there is a relationship between differences in task performance strategy and performance ability, and it compares performance strategy among elderly people divided into groups with a short mental rotation time and a long mental rotation time. In response to images of the palm, both groups displayed a medial-lateral effect in which responses were faster for images where the third finger was rotated toward the midline of the body than images rotated in the opposite direction, and we inferred that an MI strategy was primarily employed. Meanwhile, in response to images of the back of the hand, a medial-lateral effect was also observed in the group with a long mental rotation time and not in the group with the shortest mental rotation time (VI strategy). These results suggest that different strategies for performing HMRT task are used by elderly people with a short mental rotation time and those with a long mental rotation time.

Highlights

  • A hand mental rotation task (HMRT) is a task in which a person judges whether an image of a rotated hand is showing the right or left hand

  • Because aging creates more variation in function and ability between individuals (Buczylowska and Petermann, 2018), elderly people may be a population that includes individuals with varying task performance abilities and strategies. This led us to hypothesize that elderly people with short and long mental rotation times in HMRT might have different task performance strategies, and we investigated differences in the presence of the medial-lateral effect in groups divided by mental rotation time

  • The results demonstrated that the group of elderly people with a short mental rotation time used different performance strategies for the palm and the back of the hand

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Summary

Introduction

A hand mental rotation task (HMRT) is a task in which a person judges whether an image of a rotated hand is showing the right or left hand. Based on the fact that the dorsal intraparietal sulcus and the premotor cortex are active during the performance of these tasks, de Lange et al (2006) states that motor imagery (MI) is latently and personally induced. Studies on aging using HMRT show that RT is longer in elderly people than in younger people. This is thought to be caused by factors like the deterioration of motor simulation abilities based in declining bodily processes (Saimpont et al, 2009) and declining motor planning abilities (De Simone et al, 2013). Studies have shown that elderly people tend to sacrifice performance speed on cognitive tasks to maintain the accuracy of their answers (Endrass et al, 2012; Lamb et al, 2016)

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