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Clinical Trials/NCT02206347
NCT02206347
Unknown
Not Applicable

The Effect of Prioritization of Attentional Allocation on Postural-suprapostural Tasking

National Taiwan University Hospital1 site in 1 country60 target enrollmentMarch 2013

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Attention on Posture
Sponsor
National Taiwan University Hospital
Enrollment
60
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
precision-grip force error
Last Updated
11 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Postural-suprapostural task is defined as postural control takes place while at least one other concurrent task is being performed, and appropriate locus of attentional allocation is considered a critical factor for successful postural-suprapostural execution. Recent studies have indicated that the behavior performance of postural-suprapostural task would be affected by the prioritization of attentional allocation (postural-first vs. suprapostural-first); however, the inference of the appropriateness of attention prioritization is primarily limited to behavior observations and lacks direct neural evidences. How the effect of attentional priority between postural and suprapostural tasks on postural-suprapostural performance and its underlying cortical mechanism is rarely understood. By adopting postural-first and suprapostural-first strategies for postural-suprapostural task, the purpose of this 2-year research project is to 1) investigate the differences in performance quality and intrinsic neural mechanisms effect of a postural-suprapostural task for healthy adults with the analysis of event-related potential (ERP) and non-linear dynamics of behavior measures; 2) investigate brain plastic changes and the appropriateness of strategy use. In the first year, the attention prioritization effect on reciprocity of a postural-suprapostural task will be characterized by integrating the results of behavior performance and ERP causal connectivity with a special focus on validation of prevailing theoretical models. In the second year, the difference of task fluent for learning a postural-suprapostural task with postural-first/suprapostural-first strategy will be studied through the spatial and time variations in alpha rhythm after principle component analysis. The present project is expected to have significant contributions not only to gain a better insight to neural correlates of concurrent postural and motor suprapostural tasks, but to optimize treatment strategy for patients with balance or multi-tasking disturbances.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 2013
End Date
July 2015
Last Updated
11 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Single Group
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • healthy adults without neuromuscular / cardiovascular disease

Exclusion Criteria

  • pregnant women

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

precision-grip force error

Time Frame: up to 2 years

The precision-grip force error is used as the performance of suprapostural task

balance

Time Frame: up to 2 years

The balance measure is used as the postural performance.

Study Sites (1)

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