4.5 Article

Age-Related Differences in Strategy in the Hand Mental Rotation Task

Journal

FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2021.615584

Keywords

mental rotation; motor imagery; visual imagery; performance strategy; multigeneration; inverse efficiency score

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP 18K10790, 19H03990, 19K19804]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19H03990, 19K19804] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study delves into the potential value of mental imagery of movement in rehabilitation tasks and the impact of cognitive strategy. Young participants tend to use the visual imagery strategy, whereas the choice of strategy among middle-aged and elderly individuals is influenced by their performance ability.
Mental imagery of movement is a potentially valuable rehabilitation task, but its therapeutic efficacy may depend on the specific cognitive strategy employed. Individuals use two main strategies to perform the hand mental rotation task (HMRT), which involves determining whether a visual image depicts a left or right hand. One is the motor imagery (MI) strategy, which involves mentally simulating one's own hand movements. In this case, task performance as measured by response time (RT) is subject to a medial-lateral effect wherein the RT is reduced when the fingertips are directed medially, presumably as the actual motion would be easier. The other strategy is to employ visual imagery (VI), which involves mentally rotating the picture and is not subject to this medial-lateral effect. The rehabilitative benefits of the HMRT are thought to depend on the MI strategy (mental practice), so it is essential to examine the effects of individual factors such as age, image perspective (e.g., palm or back of the hand), and innate ability (as indicated by baseline RT) on the strategy adopted. When presented with pictures of the palm, all subjects in the current study used the MI strategy, regardless of age and ability. In contrast, when subjects were presented with pictures of the back of the hand, the VI strategy predominated among the young age group regardless of performance, while the strategy used by middle-age and elderly groups depended on performance ability. In the middle-age and elderly groups, the VI approach predominated in those with high performance skill, whereas the MI strategy predominated among those with low performance skill. Thus, higher-skill middle-aged and elderly individuals may not necessarily form a motion image during the HMRT, potentially limiting rehabilitation efficacy.

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