What Age-Related Differences Show After Long Cognitive Tasks?

Wed Jan 15 2025
Advertisement
Months of our lives are filled with steady brain activities. Call these Sustained Cognitive Activities (SCAs). They can tire us out mentally and affect how we move physically. A recent study found that long SCAs can make older people’s walking worse when they also think about something else, but is it the same on a treadmill? Plus, is it different for young people? Researchers set up a fun little experiment to check. They looked at young and older adults walking on a treadmill, both with and without thinking hard (using tasks like word games and math). They did this before and after a 30-minute brain teaser and a control task (just reading).
They found out that although everyone felt more tired after the brain teaser, this tiredness actually didn’t make their walking worse. Weird, right? But here’s what's interesting: their walking did change, especially after the brain teaser and even just after reading. This tells us that how we feel tired affects how we walk, especially when thinking at the same time. Older and younger people might experience this differently. So, feeling overly tired can be a danger for falling!
https://localnews.ai/article/what-age-related-differences-show-after-long-cognitive-tasks-cf62e645

actions