Preliminary Evidence That Design Fluency Is Related to Dual-Task Treadmill Gait Variability in Healthy Adults

Author:

Higginson Christopher I.1ORCID,Bifano Morgan K.1ORCID,Seymour Kelly M.2,Orr Rachel L.1,DeGoede Kurt M.3,Higginson Jill S.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Loyola University Maryland, 4501 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD 21210, USA

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Delaware, 130 Academy St., Newark, DE 19716, USA

3. Department of Engineering & Physics, Elizabethtown College, 1 Alpha Dr, Elizabethtown, PA 17022, USA

Abstract

Evidence supporting a link between gait and cognition is accumulating. However, the relation between executive functioning and spatiotemporal gait parameters has received little attention. This is surprising since these gait variables are related to falls. The goal of this preliminary study was to determine whether performance on measures of inhibition, reasoning, and fluency is related to variability in stride length and step width during dual-task treadmill walking in a sample of healthy adults. Nineteen healthy adults averaging 40 years of age were evaluated. Results indicated that processing speed was reduced, t(18) = 6.31, p = 0.0001, step width increased, t(18) = −8.00, p = 0.0001, and stride length decreased, t(18) = 3.06, p = 0.007, while dual tasking, but variability in gait parameters did not significantly change, consistent with a gait/posture-first approach. As hypothesized, better performance on a visual design fluency task which assesses cognitive flexibility was associated with less dual-task stride length variability, rs(17) = −0.43, p = 0.034, and step width variability, r = −0.56, p = 0.006. The results extend previous findings with older adults walking over ground and additionally suggest that cognitive flexibility may be important for gait maintenance while dual tasking.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference50 articles.

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