4.5 Article

Relationship between Speed of Response Inhibition and Ability to Suppress a Step in Midlife and Older Adults

期刊

BRAIN SCIENCES
卷 11, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11050643

关键词

response inhibition; reactive balance; aging; executive function; stepping

资金

  1. Utah State University Office of Research and Graduate Studies [38420]

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The study found that in older adults, the ability to inhibit responses is correlated with performance on a reactive balance test, with individuals who perform well in a cognitive stop signal task also showing better control during balance recovery. This suggests a relationship between cognitive abilities and balance control, indicating that a simple cognitive test could potentially be used clinically to predict an individual's capacity for adapting balance reactions and fall risk. Further studies with larger samples are needed to verify this relationship between stop signal reaction time and leg response during balance recovery.
In young adults, performance on a test of response inhibition was recently found to be correlated with performance on a reactive balance test where automated stepping responses must occasionally be inhibited. The present study aimed to determine whether this relationship holds true in older adults, wherein response inhibition is typically deficient and the control of postural equilibrium presents a greater challenge. Ten participants (50+ years of age) completed a seated cognitive test (stop signal task) followed by a reactive balance test. Reactive balance was assessed using a modified lean-and-release system where participants were required to step to regain balance following perturbation, or suppress a step if an obstacle was present. The stop signal task is a standardized cognitive test that provides a measure of the speed of response inhibition called the Stop Signal Reaction Time (SSRT). Muscle responses in the legs were compared between conditions where a step was allowed or blocked to quantify response inhibition of the step. The SSRT was significantly related to leg muscle suppression during balance recovery in the stance leg. Thus, participants that were better at inhibiting their responses in the stop signal task were also better at inhibiting an unwanted leg response in favor of grasping a supportive handle. The relationship between a seated cognitive test using finger responses and leg muscle suppression when a step was blocked indicates a context-independent, generalized capacity for response inhibition. This suggests that a simple cognitive test such as the stop signal task could be used clinically to predict an individual's capacity for adapting balance reactions and fall risk. The present results provide support for future studies, with larger samples, to verify this relationship between stop signal reaction time and leg response during balance recovery.

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