Skip to:Content
|
Bottom
Cover image for Changes in sensory motor behavior in aging
Title:
Changes in sensory motor behavior in aging
Publication Information:
Amsterdam, The Netherlands : North-Holland, 1996
ISBN:
9780444821010

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000003890674 QP301 C42 1996 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Recently, studies on aging processes and age-related changes in behavior have been expanding considerably, probably due to the dramatic changes observed in the demographics. This increase in the overall age and proportion of elderly people has heightened the severity of problems associated with the safety and well-being of elderly persons in everyday life. Many researchers working on motor control have thus focused more intensely on the effects of age on motor control. This new avenue of research has led to programs for alleviating or delaying the specific sensory-motor limitations encountered by the elderly (e.g. falls) in an attempt to make the elderly more autonomous.

The aggregation of studies from different perspectives is often fascinating, especially when the same field can serve as a common ground between researchers. Nearly all contributors to this book work on sensory-motor aging; they represent a large range of affiliations and backgrounds including psychology, neurobiology, cognitive sciences, kinesiology, neuropsychology, neuropharmacology, motor performance, physical therapy, exercise science, and human development. Addressing age-related behavioral changes can also furnish some crucial reflections in the debate about motor coordination: aging is the product of both maturational and environmental processes, and studies on aging must determine how the intricate interrelationships between these processes evolve. The study of aging makes it possible to determine how compensatory mechanisms, operating on different subsystems and each aging at its own rate, compensate for biological degenerations and changing external demands. This volume will contribute to demonstrating that the study of the aging process raises important theoretical questions.


Table of Contents

Age-related slowing in movement parameterization studies: Not what you thinkP.C. Amrhein
Control of simple arm movements in the elderlyS.H. Brown
Slowness, variability, and modulations of gait in healthy elderlyA.-M. Ferrandez and M. Durup and F. Farioli
Aging and coordination from the dynamic pattern perspectiveL.S. Greene and H.G. Williams
Posture control and muscle proprioception in the elderlyL. Hay
Posture and gait in healthy elderly individuals and survivors of strokeK.M. Hill and A.A. Vandervoort
Tests in rodents for assessing sensorimotor performance during agingB. Janicke and H. Coper
Attentional demands for walking: Age-related changesY. Lajoie and N. Teasdale and C. Bard and M. Fleury
Visual control of obstacle avoidance during locomotion: Strategies in young children, young and older adultsA.E. Patla and S.D. Prentice and L.T. Gobbi
Constraints on prehension: A framework for studying the effects of agingE.A. Roy and P.L. Weir and J.L. Leavitt
Age, perceived health, and specific and nonspecific measures of processing speedT.A. Salthouse and J.L. Earles
Go to:Top of Page