People
in their 20s don’t have much on their middle-aged counterparts when it comes to
some fine motor movements, researchers from UT
Arlington
have found.
In
a simple finger-tapping exercise, study participants’ speed declined only
slightly with age until a marked drop in ability with participants in their
mid-60s.
Priscila
Caçola, an assistant professor of kinesiology at The University of Texas at
Arlington, hopes the new work will help clinicians identify abnormal loss of
function in their patients. Though motor ability in older adults has been
studied widely, not a lot of research has focused on when deficits begin, she
said.
The
journal Brain and Cognition will include the study in its June 2013 issue. It
is already available online.
Priscila
Caçola
“We
have this so-called age decline, everybody knows that. I wanted to see if that
was a gradual process,” Caçola said. “It’s good news really because I didn’t
see differences between the young and middle-aged people.”
Caçola’s
co-authors on the paper are Jerroed Roberson, a senior kinesiology major at UT
Arlington, and Carl Gabbard, a professor in the Texas A&M University
Department of Health and Kinesiology.
The
researchers based their work on the idea that before movements are made, the
brain makes a mental plan. They used an evaluation process called chronometry
that compares the time of test participants’ imagined
movements to actual movements. Study participants – 99 people ranging in age
from 18 to 93 – were asked to imagine and perform a series of increasingly
difficult, ordered finger movements. They were divided into three age groups –
18-32, 40-63 and 65-93 – and the results were analyzed.
“What
we found is that there is a significant drop-off after the age of 64,” Roberson
said. “So if you see a drop-off in ability before that, then it could be a
signal that there might be something wrong with that person and they might need
further evaluation.”
The
researchers also noted that the speed of imagined movements and executed
actions tended to be closely associated within each group. That also could be
useful knowledge for clinicians, the study said.
“The
important message here is that clinicians should be aware that healthy older
adults are slower than younger adults, but are able to create relatively
accurate internal models for action,” the study said.
Caçola
is a member of UT Arlington Center for Health Living and
Longevity. She has published
previous research on the links between movement representation and motor
ability in children.
(Article written by Traci Peterson, UTA)
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