ABSTRACT
Background/Study Context
We assessed the influence of wearing an Age Simulation Suit (GERT) on gross motor, fine motor and cognitive performance in healthy young adults.
Methods
In a within-subjects design, we tested 20 young adults (Mage = 22.3 years) with and without the Age Simulation Suit. We assessed gross motor (Functional Fitness test) and fine motor (Purdue Pegboard test) functioning, cognitive performance (Digit Symbol Substitution test), and questionnaires on perceived physical state and mood. Gross and fine motor tests provided norms for large samples of older adults.
Results
Wearing the Age Simulation Suit leads to significant performance reductions in all task dimensions, with large effect sizes. Depending on the subtest, participants’ performances were reduced to the level of mid-50- to 85-years-olds for almost all tests of gross and fine motor performance. Mood and perceived physical state also declined while wearing the suit.
Conclusion
We argue that the GERT suit offers an attractive possibility to experimentally simulate the effects of aging-related sensory and motor losses and propose future studies with this paradigm, in the context of cognitive-motor dual-tasking or motor learning.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Daniel Bach and Manuel Zachej for their help in data collection and data entry. We also want to thank Gianluca Amico, Daniel Bill, and Christian Kaczmarek for helpful discussions and Peter Leinen for being our photo model. If you are interested in the raw data of this study, please don’t hesitate to contact us.
Disclosure statement
We have no conflict of interest to declare.