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Detrimental Effects of Effortful Physical Exertion on a Working Memory Dual-Task in Older Adults

Action and cognition often interact in everyday life and are both sensitive to the effects of aging. The present study tested the effects of a simple physical action, effortful handgrip exertion, on working memory (WM) and inhibitory control in younger and older adults. Using a novel dual-task parad...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Psychology and aging 2023-06, Vol.38 (4), p.291-304
Main Authors: Azer, Lilian, Xie, Weizhen, Park, Hyung-Bum, Zhang, Weiwei
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Action and cognition often interact in everyday life and are both sensitive to the effects of aging. The present study tested the effects of a simple physical action, effortful handgrip exertion, on working memory (WM) and inhibitory control in younger and older adults. Using a novel dual-task paradigm, participants engaged in a WM task with 0 or 5-distractors under concurrent physical exertion (5% vs. 30% individual maximum voluntary contraction). Effortful physical exertion, although failing to effect WM accuracy in the distractor absent condition for both age groups, reduced WM accuracy for the older, but not young adults, in the distractor-present condition. Similarly, older adults experienced greater distractor interference in the distractor-present condition under high physical exertion, indexed by slower reaction time (RT), confirmed by hierarchical Bayesian modeling of RT distributions. Our finding that a simple but effortful physical task results in impaired cognitive control may be empirically important for understanding everyday functions of older adults. For example, the ability to ignore task-irrelevant items declines with age and this decline is greater when simultaneously performing a physical task, which is a frequent occurrence in daily life. The negative interactions between cognitive and motor tasks may further impair daily functions, beyond the negative consequences of reduced inhibitory control and physical abilities in older adults. Public Significance Statement In comparison to younger adults, older adults are less likely to ignore distractors in their surrounding when simultaneously engaging in a cognitive task and an effortful physical task. These age-related differences may be amplified in situations where task demands are higher, such as having increased physical exertion or increased distractor load. This suggests that when engaging in everyday tasks that often involve concurrent physical and cognitive action, older adults' ability to ignore distracting information may be limited.
ISSN:0882-7974
1939-1498
1939-1498
DOI:10.1037/pag0000746