Tiphanie E Raffegeau1, Jeffrey M Haddad2, Jessica E Huber3, Shirley Rietdyk4. 1. Department of Health and Kinesiology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA; Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA. 2. Department of Health and Kinesiology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA. 3. Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA. 4. Department of Health and Kinesiology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA. Electronic address: srietdyk@purdue.edu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Walking while talking is an ideal multitask behavior to assess how young healthy adults manage concurrent tasks as it is well-practiced, cognitively demanding, and has real consequences for impaired performance in either task. Since the association between cognitive tasks and gait appears stronger when the gait task is more challenging, gait challenge was systematically manipulated in this study. OBJECTIVE: To understand how young adults accomplish the multitask behavior of walking while talking as the gait challenge was systematically manipulated. METHODS: Sixteen young adults (21 ± 1.6 years, 9 males) performed three gait tasks with and without speech: unobstructed gait (easy), obstacle crossing (moderate), obstacle crossing and tray carrying (difficult). Participants also provided a speech sample while seated for a baseline indicator of speech. The speech task was to speak extemporaneously about a topic (e.g. first car). Gait speed and the duration of silent pauses during speaking were determined. Silent pauses reflect cognitive processes involved in speech production and language planning. RESULTS: When speaking and walking without obstacles, gait speed decreased (relative to walking without speaking) but silent pause duration did not change (relative to seated speech). These changes are consistent with the idea that, in the easy gait task, participants placed greater value on speech pauses than on gait speed, likely due to the negative social consequences of impaired speech. In the moderate and difficult gait tasks both parameters changed: gait speed decreased and silent pauses increased. CONCLUSION: Walking while talking is a cognitively demanding task for healthy young adults, despite being a well-practiced habitual activity. These findings are consistent with the integrated model of task prioritization from Yogev-Seligmann et al., [1].
BACKGROUND: Walking while talking is an ideal multitask behavior to assess how young healthy adults manage concurrent tasks as it is well-practiced, cognitively demanding, and has real consequences for impaired performance in either task. Since the association between cognitive tasks and gait appears stronger when the gait task is more challenging, gait challenge was systematically manipulated in this study. OBJECTIVE: To understand how young adults accomplish the multitask behavior of walking while talking as the gait challenge was systematically manipulated. METHODS: Sixteen young adults (21 ± 1.6 years, 9 males) performed three gait tasks with and without speech: unobstructed gait (easy), obstacle crossing (moderate), obstacle crossing and tray carrying (difficult). Participants also provided a speech sample while seated for a baseline indicator of speech. The speech task was to speak extemporaneously about a topic (e.g. first car). Gait speed and the duration of silent pauses during speaking were determined. Silent pauses reflect cognitive processes involved in speech production and language planning. RESULTS: When speaking and walking without obstacles, gait speed decreased (relative to walking without speaking) but silent pause duration did not change (relative to seated speech). These changes are consistent with the idea that, in the easy gait task, participants placed greater value on speech pauses than on gait speed, likely due to the negative social consequences of impaired speech. In the moderate and difficult gait tasks both parameters changed: gait speed decreased and silent pauses increased. CONCLUSION: Walking while talking is a cognitively demanding task for healthy young adults, despite being a well-practiced habitual activity. These findings are consistent with the integrated model of task prioritization from Yogev-Seligmann et al., [1].
Authors: Tiphanie E Raffegeau; Sarah A Brinkerhoff; Grace K Kellaher; Sidney Baudendistel; Matthew J Terza; Jaimie A Roper; Chris J Hass Journal: Exp Gerontol Date: 2022-01-26 Impact factor: 4.032
Authors: Sachini N K Kodithuwakku Arachchige; Harish Chander; Adam C Knight; Reuben F Burch V; Chih-Chia Chen; Jennifer C Reneker Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-09-27 Impact factor: 4.614