Functional relation between postural sway and saccadic eye movements is strong and not altered by moving visual environment and concomitant memory task

Author:

Belizário Brito Matheus12ORCID,Gotardi Gisele Chiozi1,Rodrigues Sérgio Tosi1,Jacomassi Daniela Godoi3,Bonnet Cédrick T4,Polastri Paula Fávaro1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Education, Faculty of Sciences, Laboratory of Information, Vision and Action (LIVIA), São Paulo State University (UNESP), Bauru, Brazil

2. Department of Health Science, Centro Universitário Sagrado Coração (UNISAGRADO), Bauru, Brazil

3. Department of Physical Education, Center of Biological and Health Science, Dinâmica – Motor Behavior Laboratory, Federal University of São Carlos (UFSCar), São Carlos, Brazil

4. Univ. Lille, CNRS, UMR 9193 – SCALab – Sciences Cognitives et Sciences Affectives, F-59000 Lille, France

Abstract

We investigated whether the adaptation of postural control to perform saccadic tasks is still maintained in challenging situations such as when the posture is challenged with a large movement of the moving room and with the addition of a second perturbation as a visual task of memorization. Thirty young adults (20.0 ± 1.3 years) were randomly assigned to the control and experimental groups. Participants stood upright on a force plate inside a moving room wearing eye-tracking. The room moved back and forth (anterior–posterior direction), at low (.6 cm—first and third trials) and high (3.5 cm—second trial) amplitude, and frequency of .2 Hz. In each trial, participants performed left-right horizontal saccades on a target (1.1 Hz). The experimental group also performed a concomitant number memorization task. There were no differences between groups in the coupling between center of pressure (CoP) displacements and visual stimulus in any condition. There was also no difference in the performance of the saccadic task. In the memorization task, CoP displacements in response to the visual stimulus frequency (room motion) were not affected. The performance in the memorization task was similar between room conditions. Overall, increasing cognitive involvement by adding a working memory task does not deteriorate the postural stabilization of young adults to accomplish accurate gaze shifts. Also, it does not interfere with adaptive visual reweighting due to changes in the moving room amplitude. In conclusion, young adults are flexible in optimizing their postural control to succeed in multiple tasks even under perturbation.

Funder

Post-graduation Program in Movement Sciences, São Paulo State University - UNESP

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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