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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