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. 2021 Feb 19;12:643634. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2021.643634

Table 3.

Summary of studies investigating the impact of aging on perceptual thresholds.

Study Subjects Stimuli Findings
Seemungal et al. (41) • 14 young (19–37 years)
• 9 older (56–75 years)
Triangular velocity profile, 10 s • Yaw rotation thresholds were not significantly different between young and older adults.
Chang et al. (82) • 19 young (20–26 years)
• 16 older (63–84 years)
5 s of sinusoidal rotations • Yaw rotation thresholds were not significantly different between young and older adults.
Kingma (83) • 28 subjects (22–60; seven/decade) Raised sinusoids (5 periods maximum) • X-translation thresholds (1 Hz) showed a significant increase with age.
• Y-translation thresholds (1 Hz) did not show a significant increase with age.
Roditi and Crane (34) • 16 younger adults (21–49)
• 8 older adults (50–8 years)
Single cycle of sinusoidal acceleration • Z-translation (0.5 and 1 Hz), y-translation (0.5 and 1 Hz) and x-translation (0.5 Hz) thresholds were significantly higher in older adults compared to younger adults.
• Yaw rotation (0.5 and 1 Hz) and x-translation (1 Hz) thresholds were not significantly different between younger and older adults.
Agrawal et al. (20) • 42 healthy controls (15–72 years) Raised cosine velocity profile • Z-translation (0.5 Hz), y-translation (0.5 Hz) and x-translation (0.5 Hz) thresholds showed a significant positive correlation with age.
Bremova et al. (37) • 34 healthy controls (mean: 44.6 years, SD: 15.2) Raised cosine velocity profile • Z-translation (1 Hz), y-translation (1 Hz) and x-translation (1 Hz) thresholds showed a significant positive correlation with age.
Bermudez et al. (37), Karmali et al. (84), and Beylergil et al. (85)a • 105 subjects (18–80 years) Single cycle of sinusoidal acceleration • Z-translation (1 Hz), y-translation (1 Hz), and roll tilt (0.2 and 1 Hz) thresholds were constant below ~42 years of age and displayed a significant monotonic increase between 42 and 80.
• Yaw rotation thresholds (1 Hz) did not show significant increases with age when examined in isolation by Karmali et al. (84).
a

The dataset in Bermudez et al. (35) was subsequently further examined by Karmali et al. (84) and Beylergil et al. (85), thus studies are summarized together.