TY - JOUR PY - 2023// TI - The visual control of locomotion when stepping onto moving surfaces: a comparison of younger and older adults JO - Experimental gerontology A1 - Hunt, Rhys A1 - Mills, Chris A1 - Frost, Gillian A1 - Blackmore, Tim A1 - Miller-Dicks, Matt SP - e112117 EP - e112117 VL - 174 IS - N2 - Stepping between static and moving surfaces presents a locomotor challenge associated with increased injury frequency and severity in older adults. The current study evaluates younger and older adults' behaviours when overcoming challenges sampling moving walkway and escalator environments. Twelve younger adults (18-40 years, Male = 8) and 15 older adults (60-81 years, Male = 5) were examined using an integration of optoelectronic motion capture and mobile eye-tracking. Participants were investigated approaching and stepping onto a flat conveyor belt (static or moving; with or without surface (demarcation) lines). Specifically, the four conditions were: (i) static surface without demarcation lines; (ii) static surface with demarcation lines; (iii) moving surface without demarcation lines; and (iv) moving surface with demarcation lines. A two (age group) x two (surface-condition) x two (demarcation-condition) linear mixed-model revealed no main or interaction effects (p > .05) for perturbation magnitude, indicating participants maintained successful locomotion. However, different adaptive behaviours were identified between conditions with moving and accuracy demands (e.g., moving surfaces increased step length, demarcations reduced step length). Between subject effects identified differences between age groups. Older adults utilised different behaviours, such as earlier gaze transfer from the final approach walkway step location. Overall, the current study suggests that adaptive behaviours emerge relative to the environment's specific demands and the individual's action capabilities.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0531-5565 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.exger.2023.112117 ID - ref1 ER -