“…As most falls in community-dwelling older adults occur during walking (Sheldon, 1960, Tinetti et al, 1988, Lord et al, 1993, Berg et al, 1997, Niino et al, 2000, Talbot et al, 2005, Crenshaw et al, 2017, McCrum, 2019, this may be the most relevant task for PBT training for this group. However, frail older people, such as those living in residential care facilities, often experience falls during transitions (Robinovitch et al, 2013, Robinovitch, 2018, van Schooten et al, 2018, Yang et al, 2018b, thus may benefit from standing and sit-to-stand perturbation training. Finally, due to the task-specific nature of PBT, training benefits may be restricted to improvements in dynamic and perturbed balance tasks with little or no transfer to less dynamic / static balance tasks (Freyler et al, 2016, Chien and Hsu, 2018, Krause et al, 2018.…”