Motriz: Revista de Educacao Fisica (Oct 2018)

Differences in motor control of an aiming task in different group ages of the elderly

  • Lucas S. Figueiredo,
  • Tércio Apolinário-Souza,
  • Natália Lelis-Torres,
  • Guilherme M. Lage,
  • Herbert Ugrinowitsch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/s1980-657420180003e015017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 3

Abstract

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Abstract Aims: This study aimed to investigate how different age groups of older adults perform and control movements in a goal-directed aiming task and the importance of visual feedback during these movements. Methods: Participants included 22 old adults, divided in two age groups: younger (60-70 yr) and older (80-90 yr). Subjects performed the task in a condition with vision and in a condition where vision was deprived. Results: In the vision condition, younger subjects showed smaller movement and reaction times, smaller radial errors, higher peak velocities, lower relative times to reach peak velocity than older subjects. In the vision-deprived condition the same results were found, except for radial error measure, where no significant effect for age groups was found. Conclusion: Younger subjects seemed to rely more on visual online feedback than older subjects and older subjects use other sensory sources to meet the possible deficits of information obtained by vision.

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