# Cognitive load alters cortical dynamics during gait in Parkinson’s disease but not in neurologically healthy individuals

**Authors:** Luis Felipe Itikawa Imaizumi, Claudiane Arakaki Fukuchi, Lucas Simieli, Carolina Rodrigues Alves Silveira, Paulo Cezar Rocha dos Santos, Sérgio Tosi Rodrigues, Paula Favaro Polastri, Fabio Augusto Barbieri

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s11571-026-10424-4 · Cognitive Neurodynamics · 2026-02-25

## TL;DR

This study shows that people with Parkinson’s disease use more brain resources during simple walking tasks, but not during harder ones, unlike healthy individuals.

## Contribution

The study reveals distinct cognitive-motor interactions in Parkinson’s disease during dual-task walking with varying task difficulty.

## Key findings

- Individuals with PD showed higher dual-task cost for gait metrics during difficult tasks.
- Cortical activity in PD individuals decreased during more difficult tasks in specific brain regions.
- PD individuals over-engage cognitive resources during easier dual-task walking.

## Abstract

The level of difficulty of a secondary cognitive task (DT) can affect gait and cortical activity distinctly in individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD). During a simpler ST, individuals with PD may use a compensatory neural mechanism by reallocating neural resources to preserve gait performance; for difficult DT, this compensation may not be the case. However, whether different levels of difficulty of a single-domain DT would distinctively affect gait and cortical activity in individuals with PD compared to neurologically healthy individuals is still unknown. Fourteen individuals with PD and 14 healthy individuals performed walking trials at self-selected speed, under six conditions of walking with an auditory DT and varying levels of difficulty (very easy: VE-SCT, easy: E-SCT, moderate: M-SCT, difficult: D-SCT, and very difficult: VD-SCT). Gait kinematics and cortical activity data were recorded. RM-ANOVAs identified that individuals with PD showed higher DT cost for both step length and step velocity when the cognitive task was D-SCT or VD-SCT, compared to easier tasks (p < 0.005). Cortical activity showed a different pattern. During more difficult tasks (M-SCT, D-SCT, VD-SCT), PD individuals had a lower DT cost in delta frequency (frontal and motor areas) and beta frequency (parietal area) compared to the easier tasks (VE-SCT, E-SCT) (p < 0.005). These findings suggest that individuals with PD exhibit a distinct pattern of cognitive-motor interaction during dual-task walking, characterized by increased cortical dual-task cost in lower vs. greater gait deterioration in higher task demands. These findings suggest that individuals with PD over-engage cognitive resources while walking with relatively easier DT.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Parkinson’s disease (MONDO:0005180)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** FANCB (FA complementation group B) [NCBI Gene 2187] {aka FA2, FAAP90, FAAP95, FAB, FACB}, KAT2B (lysine acetyltransferase 2B) [NCBI Gene 8850] {aka CAF, P/CAF, PCAF}, PRF1 (perforin 1) [NCBI Gene 5551] {aka HPLH2, P1, PFP}
- **Diseases:** psychiatric (MESH:D001523), decline (MESH:D060825), PD (MESH:D010300), anxiety disorder (MESH:D001008), major depressive disorder (MESH:D003865), neurological disorders (MESH:D009461), fatigue (MESH:D005221), gait deterioration (MESH:D020233), falls (MESH:C537863), cardiovascular, hearing, and visual problems (MESH:D002318), psychotic disorders (MESH:D011618), hypokinesia (MESH:D018476), DT (MESH:D009105), cognitive (MESH:D003072), motor (MESH:D000068079), impaired gait performance (MESH:D020234)
- **Chemicals:** DT (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12936290