Concurrent listening impairs compensatory postural control mechanisms in middle and late adulthood
Nathan Van Humbeeck, Mira Van Wilderode, Astrid van Wieringen, Ralf T. Krampe

TL;DR
Middle-aged and older adults struggle more with balancing while listening and multitasking, showing that multitasking challenges emerge as early as middle adulthood.
Contribution
This study reveals that multitasking challenges in postural control emerge in middle adulthood, not just in older adults.
Findings
Middle-aged and older adults show reduced postural stability during multitasking.
Stabilogram diffusion analysis highlights impaired long-term corrective mechanisms in middle and late adulthood.
Cognitive compensation maintains postural stability in middle-aged adults under ideal conditions but fails during multitasking.
Abstract
Multitasking involving sensorimotor functions has been shown to affect older more than young adults but little is known about whether related challenges already emerge in middle adulthood. Here we compare 21 younger (18–30 years of age), 23 middle-aged (45–65 years of age) and 19 older participants (66–81 years of age) who listened to and memorized spoken words while they tried to maintain a stable posture on a force platform. The number of words in the listening task was adjusted to individual single-task levels and cognitive control demands were manipulated by presenting words from either the same or switching target speakers. Postural control demands were varied by manipulating proprioceptive reliability (stable stance or sway-referencing). Young adults’ listening and postural control remained unaffected by concurrent performances. During multitasking middle-aged and older adults…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation · Neuroscience and Music Perception · Noise Effects and Management
