| Literature DB >> 23326312 |
Gilles Lafargue1, Myriam Noël, Marion Luyat.
Abstract
Before an action is performed, the brain simulates the body's dynamic behavior in relation to the environment, estimates the possible outcomes and assesses the feasibility of potential actions. Here, we tested a hypothesis whereby age-related changes in sensorimotor abilities result in failure to update internal models of action in the elderly. Young and older adults were required to judge in advance whether or not they could stand on an inclined plane (Experiment 1). Relative to young adults, elderly adults overestimated their postural capabilities: although the two groups made similar feasibility judgments, elderly participants showed significantly worse postural performance levels. This tendency to overestimate their own ability persisted when elderly adults had to not only estimate the feasibility of an action but also endanger themselves by walking towards an obstacle that was too high for them to clear (Experiment 2). An age-related failure to update internal models may prompt the elderly to make over-optimistic predictions about upcoming actions. In turn, this may favor risky motor decision-making and promote falls.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23326312 PMCID: PMC3541384 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The mean (standard deviation) feasibility and postural thresholds in degrees (i.e. self-estimated ability and real ability, respectively), as a function of condition and age.
| Self-estimated ability | Real ability | |||
| vision | haptic | vision | no vision | |
|
| 35.50° (6.11) | 33.75° (8.63) | 33.45° (5.78) | 32.40° (6.05) |
|
| 34.73° (6.99) | 34.73° (6.13) | 28.05° (6.83) | 25.80° (7.11) |
Figure 1Individual results.
Self-estimated ability (y-axis; feasibility thresholds in degrees) and actual ability (x-axis; postural thresholds in degrees) as a function of age and the vision-enabled and haptic conditions. The diagonal line represents a perfect fit between self-estimated and actual ability; values below the diagonal correspond to underestimation of ability and values above the diagonal correspond to overestimation. NB: although the scatter plots of the young adult and older groups show similar values on the y-axis (self-estimated ability), the plot for the older group is shifted to the left on the x-axis (i.e. lower actual ability).
Figure 2Mean overestimation in each of the groups.
The overestimation index was computed by subtracting each participant's mean real postural threshold from his/her mean feasibility threshold. The bars represent standard error of the means.
Figure 3Mean endangerment indexes for both groups.
The endangerment indexes were computed by subtracting the greatest height that the participant could really step over from the greatest height that the participant had attempted to clear. The bars represent standard error of the means.