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Using a self-modulated treadmill as a novel approach to study cognitive-motor and biomechanical outcomes during dual-task walking in individuals with and without lower limb loss

  • Emma P. Shaw
  • , Sarah R. Bass
  • , Jonathan R. Gladish
  • , Kyle Pietro
  • , Alexandra A. Shaver
  • , Christopher Gaskins
  • , Steven Kahl
  • , Christopher L. Dearth
  • , Matthew W. Miller
  • , Alison Pruziner
  • , Bradley D. Hatfield
  • , Brad D. Hendershot
  • , Rodolphe J. Gentili*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Combined examination of mental workload and biomechanics during dual-task walking in individuals with lower-limb loss is limited to fixed, but not self-modulated walking pace, for which the latter enables dynamic cognitive-motor behavior as typically engaged during community ambulation. By assessing electroencephalography (EEG) (theta, low/high-alpha power) and biomechanics (gait speed, double limb support, stride width), the cerebral cortical activity underlying mental workload and walking mechanics were examined when individuals with and without lower-limb loss executed a cognitive task (assessed via response time and accuracy) under variable demand (seated and walking). Both populations maintained walking mechanics (unchanged gait speed, double limb support, stride width) during dual-task walking across demand and exhibited similarly elevated neurocognitive engagement (e.g., attention, action monitoring) indicated by similar theta power increase and low/high-alpha power decrease when facing greater demand. However, injured individuals exhibited relative performance decrement (degraded response time/accuracy), which suggests attenuated cognitive-motor efficiency relative to uninjured (i.e., similar cortical activity across groups with degraded performance). Moreover, while uninjured individuals during dual-task walking could robustly engage neurocognitive processes to maintain walking mechanics and successfully attend to the concurrent cognitive task, those with lower-limb loss did not exhibit such a robust recruitment (i.e., unchanged frontal/temporal high-alpha power). Such alterations in individuals with lower-limb loss leads to maintenance of walking at the cost of a concurrent task. The present work informs rehabilitation practice and reveals specific cognitive-motor outcomes for individuals with lower-limb loss in an enhanced ecological context.

Original languageEnglish
Article number30
JournalExperimental Brain Research
Volume244
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2026

Keywords

  • Biomechanics
  • Dual-task walking
  • Electroencephalography
  • Lower limb loss
  • Mental workload
  • Self-paced walking

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