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Functional performance comparison between real and virtual tasks in older adults A cross-sectional study

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Date
2018
Author
Pinheiro Bezerra, Italla Maria
Crocetta, Tania Brusque
Massetti, Thais
da Silva, Talita Dias [UNIFESP]
Guarnieri, Regiani
Meira, Cassio de Miranda, Jr.
Arab, Claudia [UNIFESP]
de Abreu, Luiz Carlos
de Araujo, Luciano Vieira
de Mello Monteiro, Carlos Bandeira
Type
Artigo
ISSN
0025-7974
Is part of
Medicine
DOI
10.1097/MD.0000000000009612
Metadata
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Abstract
Introduction: Ageing is usually accompanied by deterioration of physical abilities, such as muscular strength, sensory sensitivity, and functional capacity, making chronic diseases, and the well-being of older adults new challenges to global public health. Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a task practiced in a virtual environment could promote better performance and enable transfer to the same task in a real environment. Method: The study evaluated 65 older adults of both genders, aged 60 to 82 years (M = 69.6, SD = 6.3). A timing coincident task was applied to measure the perceptual-motor ability to perform a motor response. The participants were divided into 2 groups: started in a real interface and started in a virtual interface. Results: All subjects improved their performance during the practice, but improvement was not observed for the real interface, as the participants were near maximum performance from the beginning of the task. However, there was no transfer of performance from the virtual to real environment or vice versa. Conclusions: The virtual environment was shown to provide improvement of performance with a short-term motor learning protocol in a timing coincident task. This result suggests that the practice of tasks in a virtual environment seems to be a promising tool for the assessment and training of healthy older adults, even though there was no transfer of performance to a real environment.
Citation
Medicine. Philadelphia, v. 97, n. 4, 2018.
Keywords
computer tasks
older adults
timing coincident
virtual reality
Sponsorship
São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)
ABC Medical College
Acre State Government
URI
https://repositorio.unifesp.br/handle/11600/53810
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  • EPM - Artigos [17701]

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