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Effects of dual-task training on cognitive-motor learning and cortical activation: A non-randomized clinical trial in healthy young adults.
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- Abstract:
Dual-task (DT) training, which involves the simultaneous execution of cognitive and motor tasks, has been shown to influence task performance and cortical activation, yet evidence on the effects of DT training and cortical activation for complex postural control tasks remains limited. This study investigated the immediate and retention effects of a one-week DT training program on DT learning, performance in DT and single-task conditions, and activation in bilateral prefrontal (PFC) and vestibular cortices in healthy young adults. Eighteen individuals (age = 22.39 ± 1.73 years) participated in the study. The DT paradigm involved a dynamic stability platform (motor task) paired with either a simple or complex auditory reaction time (RT) task (cognitive). Participants completed 20–25 minutes of DT training (18 trials/day) across five consecutive days. DT performance was measured by the duration participants maintained the stability platform within 3 degrees of the horizontal while responding to auditory stimuli. Single-task motor and cognitive performances were also assessed. Cortical activation in the PFC and vestibular cortices was measured using functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), tracking changes in oxygenated hemoglobin (HbO) concentrations. Pre-training, post-training, and one-week follow-up testing was conducted. The results demonstrate that DT training significantly improves and retains DT performance, likely due to a reduction in cognitive-motor interference. Additionally, DT training led to decreased activation in the bilateral PFC and vestibular cortices, specifically for complex DT condition, suggesting enhanced attentional resource allocation and optimized vestibular input processing, indicative of neural efficiency. Notably, these training effects also transferred to single-task cognitive and motor performances, with corresponding reductions in PFC and vestibular cortex activation, despite the lack of direct training on these tasks. This study advances our understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying DT training and underscores the critical role of practice in optimizing cognitive-motor efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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