Postural demands modulate tactile perception in the lower limb in young and older adults
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Balance control requires the continuous integration of feedback signals from several sensory organs with feedforward estimates about the state of the body. Such feedback signals are important for standing upright, as shown in increased and more variable sway patterns when sensory feedback is compromised, for instance when standing with eyes closed or on unstable surfaces that make cutaneous signals from the foot less reliable. Poorer sensory processing is also considered to arise during healthy aging due to a decrease of the reliability and transmission rate of feedback signals. Here, we are interested in how processing of tactile signals from the lower leg is modulated when balance control is challenged and how this interacts with age-related sensorimotor changes. We examined tactile sensitivity on the lower leg during sitting, standing on stable ground, and standing on unstable ground (foam). We quantified the center of pressure during the two standing conditions by determining the area of a 95% confidence interval ellipse as well as the total displacement of the center of pressure. Tactile sensitivity was assessed by asking participants to detect brief vibrotactile probes of various intensities to the lower leg. As expected, postural sway increased when standing on foam than stable ground for both age groups. When postural demands were minimal (sitting), tactile sensitivity was overall poorer in older than younger adults. Tactile perception was also poorer when standing on foam than on the stable ground, for both age groups. We conclude that increased postural demands reduce reliance on tactile signals from the lower limb in both young and older adults.