Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4056545 | Gait & Posture | 2011 | 5 Pages |
We investigated dual-task performance of cognitive (semantic fluency) and sensorimotor tasks (walking) in 120 children and adults from four age groups (9-year olds, M = 9.52 years; 11-year olds, M = 11.51 years; young adults, M = 25.34 years; older adults, M = 64.28 years; N = 30 per group). Distances walked during 90 s and numbers of category exemplars generated in the semantic fluency task showed an inverted U-shape function with age. In line with general resource models proportional dual-task costs in walking also showed a U-shaped relation as a function of age with pronounced decrements in the youngest and oldest groups. Only 9-year olds showed significant costs in the cognitive task. Individual differences in single-task performance accounted for more than half of the variance in dual-task performance. Reliable age-related residual variance implicated additional factors particularly in children's developing multi-tasking performances.