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      Aging affects attunement in perceiving length by dynamic touch

      research-article
      ,
      Attention, Perception & Psychophysics
      Springer-Verlag
      Aging, Attunement, Dynamic touch, Ecological psychology

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          Abstract

          Earlier studies have revealed age-dependent differences in perception by dynamic touch. In the present study, we examined whether the capacity to learn deteriorates with aging. Adopting an ecological approach to learning, the authors examined the process of attunement—that is, the changes in what informational variable is exploited. Young and elderly adults were trained to perceive the lengths of unseen, handheld rods. It was found that the capacity to attune declines with aging: Contrary to the young adults, the elderly proved unsuccessful in learning to detect the specifying informational variables. The fact that aging affects the capacity to attune sets a new line of research in the study of perception and perceptual-motor skills of elderly. The authors discuss the implications of their findings for the ongoing discussions on the ecological approach to learning.

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          Most cited references38

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          Somesthetic sensitivity in young and elderly humans.

          Absolute thresholds were measured on 27 young (ages 19 to 31) and 21 elderly (ages 55 to 84) humans to six modes of cutaneous stimulation (single ramp-and-hold skin indentations--tactile, vibration at 40 and 250 Hz, temperature increases and decreases, and noxious heat) at two sites, the thenar eminence and the plantar foot. Comparisons of the elderly and young groups showed that elderly persons were significantly, p less than or equal to .001, less sensitive than young individuals to mechanical stimuli (tactile and vibration) at both sites. No significant differences were found in thresholds to thermal stimuli (warm-, cold-, and heat-pain) at either site except elderly feet were significantly, p less than or equal to .001, less sensitive than young feet to warm stimuli. Thresholds of elderly individuals were compared with the young group thresholds for deficits in sensitivity. All elderly participants showed deficits to one or more of the stimulus modes at one or the other site. There were significantly, p less than or equal to 0.01, more deficits to mechanical than to thermal stimuli. There was no increase in the frequency of deficits with increasing age.
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            Components of sensorimotor adaptation in young and elderly subjects.

            Otmar Bock (2004)
            Previous studies have found that sensorimotor adaptation to visual distortions is degraded in seniors compared with younger subjects, whereas after-effects on removal of the distortion are age-independent. The latter finding was interpreted as evidence that adaptive recalibration is not affected by old age, and that the observed degradation is therefore due to impairment of strategic control. However, after-effects are not a reliable measure of recalibration, because they can be artificially inflated by perseveration, a characteristic symptom in old age. The present work therefore introduces a test of recalibration which is insensitive to perseveration. Twelve young and twelve old subjects executed center-out pointing movements while visual feedback about their fingertip was either veridical (baseline), 60-deg rotated (adaptation), or absent (after-effect). They also executed tracking movements toward an unpredictably moving object before and after the pointing task. Seniors adapted less than younger subjects but their after-effects were not degraded. More importantly, transfer of adaptation from a pointing to a tracking task was not degraded in seniors. The latter outcome documents, in a more compelling fashion than previous work, that recalibration in the elderly is not impaired, and that the observed deficit of adaptation is therefore most probably because of impaired strategic control. This conclusion is supported by two additional findings: compared with young subjects our seniors performed less well on a cognitive screening test and acquired no explicit knowledge about the nature of the imposed visual distortion.
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              Individual differences in the visual control of intercepting a penalty kick in association football.

              Recent perceptual-motor studies have revealed variations in learning trajectories of novices. Despite such observation, relatively little attention has been paid to studying individual differences in experienced performers' perceptual-motor behaviors. The present study examined individual differences for a visual anticipation task. Experienced association football goalkeepers attempted to intercept penalty kicks taken with deceptive and non-deceptive kicking actions. Data revealed that differences in the action capabilities of goalkeepers affected the timing and accuracy of movement response behaviors. Faster goalkeepers tended to wait until later before initiating movement in comparison with slower goalkeepers. The study of affordances in sport environments offers a theoretical framework with which to overcome some of the reported methodological limitations in the visual anticipation literature. (c) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +31-503638978 , +31-503633150 , R.G.Withagen@med.umcg.nl
                Journal
                Atten Percept Psychophys
                Attention, Perception & Psychophysics
                Springer-Verlag (New York )
                1943-3921
                1943-393X
                2 February 2011
                2 February 2011
                May 2011
                : 73
                : 4
                : 1216-1226
                Affiliations
                Center for Human Movement Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, P.O. Box, 196, 9700AD Groningen, The Netherlands
                Article
                92
                10.3758/s13414-011-0092-z
                3089720
                21287316
                de32dcaa-475a-4306-abf9-538107275795
                © The Author(s) 2011
                History
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Psychonomic Society, Inc. 2011

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                ecological psychology,aging,dynamic touch,attunement
                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                ecological psychology, aging, dynamic touch, attunement

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