A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly.
Neuropsychological abilities have found to explain a large proportion of variance in objective measures of walking gait that predict both dementia and falling within the elderly. However, to this date there has been little research on the interplay between changes in these neuropsychological process...
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doaj-8bb92c6eeab64222a1f84d4d152dc7f82020-11-25T01:18:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0196e9943610.1371/journal.pone.0099436A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly.Rebecca K MacAulayRobert M BrouilletteHeather C FoilAnnadora J Bruce-KellerJeffrey N KellerNeuropsychological abilities have found to explain a large proportion of variance in objective measures of walking gait that predict both dementia and falling within the elderly. However, to this date there has been little research on the interplay between changes in these neuropsychological processes and walking gait overtime. To our knowledge, the present study is the first to investigate intra-individual changes in neurocognitive test performance and gait step time at two-time points across a one-year span. Neuropsychological test scores from 440 elderly individuals deemed cognitively normal at Year One were analyzed via repeated measures t-tests to assess for decline in cognitive performance at Year Two. 34 of these 440 individuals neuropsychological test performance significantly declined at Year Two; whereas the "non-decliners" displayed improved memory, working memory, attention/processing speed test performance. Neuropsychological test scores were also submitted to factor analysis at both time points for data reduction purposes and to assess the factor stability overtime. Results at Year One yielded a three-factor solution: Language/Memory, Executive Attention/Processing Speed, and Working Memory. Year Two's test scores also generated a three-factor solution (Working Memory, Language/Executive Attention/Processing Speed, and Memory). Notably, language measures loaded on Executive Attention/Processing Speed rather than on the Memory factor at Year Two. Hierarchal multiple regression revealed that both Executive Attention/Processing Speed and sex significantly predicted variance in dual task step time at both time points. Remarkably, in the "decliners", the magnitude of the contribution of the neuropsychological characteristics to gait variance significantly increased at Year Two. In summary, this study provides longitudinal evidence of the dynamic relationship between intra-individual cognitive change and its influence on dual task gait step time. These results also indicate that the failure to show improved test performance (particularly, on memory tests) with repeated administrations might prove to be useful of indicator of early cognitive decline.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4048284?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rebecca K MacAulay Robert M Brouillette Heather C Foil Annadora J Bruce-Keller Jeffrey N Keller |
spellingShingle |
Rebecca K MacAulay Robert M Brouillette Heather C Foil Annadora J Bruce-Keller Jeffrey N Keller A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Rebecca K MacAulay Robert M Brouillette Heather C Foil Annadora J Bruce-Keller Jeffrey N Keller |
author_sort |
Rebecca K MacAulay |
title |
A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly. |
title_short |
A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly. |
title_full |
A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly. |
title_fullStr |
A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly. |
title_full_unstemmed |
A longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly. |
title_sort |
longitudinal study on dual-tasking effects on gait: cognitive change predicts gait variance in the elderly. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
Neuropsychological abilities have found to explain a large proportion of variance in objective measures of walking gait that predict both dementia and falling within the elderly. However, to this date there has been little research on the interplay between changes in these neuropsychological processes and walking gait overtime. To our knowledge, the present study is the first to investigate intra-individual changes in neurocognitive test performance and gait step time at two-time points across a one-year span. Neuropsychological test scores from 440 elderly individuals deemed cognitively normal at Year One were analyzed via repeated measures t-tests to assess for decline in cognitive performance at Year Two. 34 of these 440 individuals neuropsychological test performance significantly declined at Year Two; whereas the "non-decliners" displayed improved memory, working memory, attention/processing speed test performance. Neuropsychological test scores were also submitted to factor analysis at both time points for data reduction purposes and to assess the factor stability overtime. Results at Year One yielded a three-factor solution: Language/Memory, Executive Attention/Processing Speed, and Working Memory. Year Two's test scores also generated a three-factor solution (Working Memory, Language/Executive Attention/Processing Speed, and Memory). Notably, language measures loaded on Executive Attention/Processing Speed rather than on the Memory factor at Year Two. Hierarchal multiple regression revealed that both Executive Attention/Processing Speed and sex significantly predicted variance in dual task step time at both time points. Remarkably, in the "decliners", the magnitude of the contribution of the neuropsychological characteristics to gait variance significantly increased at Year Two. In summary, this study provides longitudinal evidence of the dynamic relationship between intra-individual cognitive change and its influence on dual task gait step time. These results also indicate that the failure to show improved test performance (particularly, on memory tests) with repeated administrations might prove to be useful of indicator of early cognitive decline. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4048284?pdf=render |
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