Older adults show reduced motor performance and changes in motor skill development. To better understand these changes, we studied differences in sequence knowledge representations between young and older adults using a transfer task. Transfer, or the ability to apply motor skills flexibly, is highly relevant in day-to-day motor activity and facilitates generalization of learning to new contexts. By using movement types that are completely unrelated in terms of muscle activation and response location, we focused on transfer facilitated by the early, visuospatial system. We tested 32 right-handed older adults (65–75) and 32 young adults (18–30). During practice of a discrete sequence production task, participants learned two six-element sequ...
Using a continuous bimanual tracking task with three different movement speeds, we examined motor le...
Motor imagery and action-based rehearsal were compared during motor sequence-learning by young adult...
Some activities can be meaningfully dichotomised as 'cognitive' or 'sensorimotor' in nature-but many...
The goal of the current study was to determine whether age influences the ability to transfer sequen...
The aging society calls for increased understanding of age-related cognitive and neural changes in m...
The present study examined whether middle-aged participants, like young adults, learn movement patte...
The present study examined whether middle-aged participants, like young adults, learn movement patte...
The present study examined whether elderly use motor chunks after practicing discrete keying sequenc...
We assessed the effects of aging in the transfer of motor learning in a sequential manual assembly t...
Research has indicated that older adults perform movement sequences more slowly than young adults. T...
The purpose of this study was to identify which characteristics of a multidimensional sequence conta...
Panzer S, Grützmacher N, Fries U, Krueger M, Shea CH. Aging effects in interlimb practice and coding...
Introduction: Older adults show higher interindividual performance variability during the learning o...
Motor learning has been shown to decline in healthy aging, particularly in the early stages of acqui...
Motor imagery and action-based rehearsal were compared during motor sequence-learning by young adult...
Using a continuous bimanual tracking task with three different movement speeds, we examined motor le...
Motor imagery and action-based rehearsal were compared during motor sequence-learning by young adult...
Some activities can be meaningfully dichotomised as 'cognitive' or 'sensorimotor' in nature-but many...
The goal of the current study was to determine whether age influences the ability to transfer sequen...
The aging society calls for increased understanding of age-related cognitive and neural changes in m...
The present study examined whether middle-aged participants, like young adults, learn movement patte...
The present study examined whether middle-aged participants, like young adults, learn movement patte...
The present study examined whether elderly use motor chunks after practicing discrete keying sequenc...
We assessed the effects of aging in the transfer of motor learning in a sequential manual assembly t...
Research has indicated that older adults perform movement sequences more slowly than young adults. T...
The purpose of this study was to identify which characteristics of a multidimensional sequence conta...
Panzer S, Grützmacher N, Fries U, Krueger M, Shea CH. Aging effects in interlimb practice and coding...
Introduction: Older adults show higher interindividual performance variability during the learning o...
Motor learning has been shown to decline in healthy aging, particularly in the early stages of acqui...
Motor imagery and action-based rehearsal were compared during motor sequence-learning by young adult...
Using a continuous bimanual tracking task with three different movement speeds, we examined motor le...
Motor imagery and action-based rehearsal were compared during motor sequence-learning by young adult...
Some activities can be meaningfully dichotomised as 'cognitive' or 'sensorimotor' in nature-but many...