Mochizuki, GeorgeTworzyanski, Erika Helena2023-12-082023-12-082023-12-08https://hdl.handle.net/10315/41609Young healthy adult posture-cognition dual-task (DT) control relies on some degree of automatic mechanisms; however, the use of automatic control strategies while dual-tasking, in various contexts, has received little attention. This thesis aimed to examine how combined manipulations of postural and cognitive tasks influenced automatic and conscious postural control strategies. Chapter 2 focused on cognitive task difficulty (six levels) under two postural challenges. Findings showed automaticity to increase when distracted; this increase did not depend on the postural challenge and cognitive task difficulty. Chapter 3 considered combined postural (six levels) and cognitive (two levels) task challenges. Findings demonstrated that some automatic control remained despite stability challenges; however, relatively less automatic control may be used when the overall DT challenge increases. Together these findings suggest that young healthy adults continue to use some automatic mechanisms when distracted in various DT contexts.Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.KinesiologyNeurosciencesBiomechanicsThe effect of dual-task difficulty on automatic and conscious postural controlElectronic Thesis or Dissertation2023-12-08Automatic postural controlCognitive taskCognitive task difficultyConscious postural controlDual-task paradigmDual-task difficultySample entropyUnderlying mechanisms