Föreläsningar och seminarier Cognitive Neuroscience Club med Jean-Jacques Orban de Xivry: "Sensory and motor functions that are preserved with aging"

2021-04-27 16:00 Add to iCal
Online Online via Zoom

Den sista veckan i varje månad bjuder Cognitive Neuroscience Club in till en föreläsning på temat kognitiv neurovetenskap. Den 27 april kl. 16:00 välkomnar vi Jean-Jacques Orban de Xivry från KU Leuven i Nederländerna.

Anslut via Zoom

Du kan delta vid mötet genom att klicka på följande Zoomlänk

"Sensory and motor functions that are preserved with aging"

Föreläsare/talare

Jean-Jacques Orban de Xivry, KU Leuven, Belgien

Abstract

Motor and sensory functions are thought to be decreasing with age. Yet, in different motor paradigms linked to internal model function and in sensory paradigms believed to assess somatosensation and/or proprioception, we observed that the performance of the older participants was at least as good as and sometimes even “better” than that of younger participants. The motor tasks tested were all linked to internal model function and were based on either the assessment of internal model recalibration or on sensory attenuation. A survey of the literature on motor function relying on cerebellar function (synchronization of grip force/load force, interjoint coordination …) confirmed this view.

On the sensory side, we tested a large number of participants (N>70) on an arm position matching task and on a perceptual boundary task and found, again, that older people were not impaired on these tasks that are based on conscious report of arm position. Other data from our lab and from other labs confirm that the ability of localizing one’s arm does not change with age.
The talk will be concluded with a few observations about why the literature is heavily biased in favor of age-related changes in function and about whether the populations of older people that are coming to the lab is representative of the general population.  Together, these results show that scientists need to do a better job at understanding the domains where sensory and motor functions deteriorate with aging. Every attendee (especially those above 55 years old) will be happy to see that they should not expect a rapid decline in sensory and motor function by the time of their retirement.

Kontakt

Laura Crucianelli Anknuten till Forskning