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首页> 外文期刊>Behavioural Brain Research: An International Journal >Mentally represented motor actions in normal aging. I. Age effects on the temporal features of overt and covert execution of actions.
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Mentally represented motor actions in normal aging. I. Age effects on the temporal features of overt and covert execution of actions.

机译:正常衰老时的心理动作代表运动。一,年龄对公开和秘密执行行动的时间特征的影响。

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摘要

The present study examines the temporal features of overt and covert actions as a function of normal aging. In the first experiment, we tested three motor tasks (walking, sit-stand-sit, arm pointing) that did not imply any particular spatiotemporal constraints, and we compared the duration of their overt and covert execution in three different groups of age (mean ages: 22.5, 66.2 and 73.4 years). We found that the ability of generating motor images did not differentiate elderly subjects from young subjects. Precisely, regarding overt and covert durations, subjects presented similarities for the walking and pointing tasks and dissimilarities for the stand-sit-stand task. Furthermore, the timing variability of imagined movements was always greater compared to actual movements and was of the same amount in the three groups of age. In the second experiment, we investigated the effect of age (three groups with mean ages: 22, 64.8 and 73.2 years) upon temporal characteristics of covert and overt movements involving strong spatiotemporal constraints (speed/accuracy trade-off paradigm). During overt execution young and elderly subjects respected Fitts's law despite the fact that movement speed progressively decreased with age. Thus, while execution is deteriorated, the motor preparation process is still intact in old age, and follows well-known laws of biological motions. For covert execution, movement speed progressively decreased with age but elderly subjects did not respect Fitts's law. This suggests that the generation and control of motor intentions that consciously do not come to execution, particularly those concerning complex motor actions are progressively perturbed in the aging brain.
机译:本研究检查了显性和隐性动作的时间特征,作为正常衰老的函数。在第一个实验中,我们测试了三个运动任务(步行,坐立,坐下,手臂指向),这些运动任务并不暗示任何特定的时空限制,并且我们比较了他们在三个不同年龄段中的公开和秘密执行的持续时间(平均年龄:22.5、66.2和73.4岁)。我们发现生成运动图像的能力并未将老年受试者与年轻受试者区分开。准确地说,关于公开和公开的持续时间,受试者表现出步行和指向任务的相似性,而站立-站立-站立任务的异同性。此外,与实际动作相比,想象中动作的时间变化总是更大,并且在三组年龄中相同。在第二个实验中,我们研究了年龄(三组平均年龄分别为22、64.8和73.2岁)对涉及强烈时空约束(速度/精度权衡范式)的隐秘和公开运动的时间特征的影响。在公开处决中,年轻和老年受试者都遵守Fitts法则,尽管运动速度会随着年龄的增长而逐渐降低。因此,尽管执行性能变差,但是电动机准备过程在老年时仍然完好无损,并且遵循众所周知的生物运动定律。对于秘密执行,运动速度随着年龄的增长而逐渐降低,但是老年受试者不遵守菲茨定律。这表明运动意识的产生和控制在意识衰老的大脑中会逐渐受到干扰,这些运动意识有意识地没有被执行,特别是那些涉及复杂运动行为的运动意图。

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