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Erschienen in:

28.03.2024 | Research Article

Effects of older age on visual and self-motion sensory cue integration in navigation

verfasst von: Corey S. Shayman, Maggie K. McCracken, Hunter C. Finney, Andoni M. Katsanevas, Peter C. Fino, Jeanine K. Stefanucci, Sarah H. Creem-Regehr

Erschienen in: Experimental Brain Research | Ausgabe 6/2024

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Abstract

Older adults demonstrate impairments in navigation that cannot be explained by general cognitive and motor declines. Previous work has shown that older adults may combine sensory cues during navigation differently than younger adults, though this work has largely been done in dark environments where sensory integration may differ from full-cue environments. Here, we test whether aging adults optimally combine cues from two sensory systems critical for navigation: vision (landmarks) and body-based self-motion cues. Participants completed a homing (triangle completion) task using immersive virtual reality to offer the ability to navigate in a well-lit environment including visibility of the ground plane. An optimal model, based on principles of maximum-likelihood estimation, predicts that precision in homing should increase with multisensory information in a manner consistent with each individual sensory cue’s perceived reliability (measured by variability). We found that well-aging adults (with normal or corrected-to-normal sensory acuity and active lifestyles) were more variable and less accurate than younger adults during navigation. Both older and younger adults relied more on their visual systems than a maximum likelihood estimation model would suggest. Overall, younger adults’ visual weighting matched the model’s predictions whereas older adults showed sub-optimal sensory weighting. In addition, high inter-individual differences were seen in both younger and older adults. These results suggest that older adults do not optimally weight each sensory system when combined during navigation, and that older adults may benefit from interventions that help them recalibrate the combination of visual and self-motion cues for navigation.
Fußnoten
1
While the Romberg test was intended as a screening tool, \(post-hoc\) Pearson correlation showed no relationship between visual sway ratio (Assländer and Peterka 2014) and visual cue weighting for navigation (defined later) for both younger (\(R^{2}\) = 0.04, p = 0.35) and older adults (\(R^{2}\) = 0.01, p = 0.75)
 
2
The real world experiment measured homing position data differently than the VR experiment because of the need to measure performance in the real world without a VR tracking system. Specifically, only absolute error (distance from the home target), not direction of error, was recorded in the real world. This particularly affected the measurements needed for the weights derived from the conflict condition. Given that a primary goal of this paper is to test a model of optimal cue combination in navigation in a virtual environment, the real world and VR experiments are not directly compared in this paper.
 
3
\(Post-hoc\) paired t-tests did not show order effects for younger adults in either accuracy (t(23) = 0.17, p = 0.87) or variability (t(23) = 0.99, p = 0.32) of navigational performance.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Effects of older age on visual and self-motion sensory cue integration in navigation
verfasst von
Corey S. Shayman
Maggie K. McCracken
Hunter C. Finney
Andoni M. Katsanevas
Peter C. Fino
Jeanine K. Stefanucci
Sarah H. Creem-Regehr
Publikationsdatum
28.03.2024
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Experimental Brain Research / Ausgabe 6/2024
Print ISSN: 0014-4819
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1106
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-024-06818-7

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