Acute Exercise Improves Prefrontal Cortex but not Hippocampal Function in Healthy Adults

The effects of acute aerobic exercise on cognitive functions in humans have been the subject of much investigation; however, these studies are limited by several factors, including a lack of randomized controlled designs, focus on only a single cognitive function, and testing during or shortly after...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society 2015-11, Vol.21 (10), p.791-801
Hauptverfasser: Basso, Julia C., Shang, Andrea, Elman, Meredith, Karmouta, Ryan, Suzuki, Wendy A.
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container_title Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society
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creator Basso, Julia C.
Shang, Andrea
Elman, Meredith
Karmouta, Ryan
Suzuki, Wendy A.
description The effects of acute aerobic exercise on cognitive functions in humans have been the subject of much investigation; however, these studies are limited by several factors, including a lack of randomized controlled designs, focus on only a single cognitive function, and testing during or shortly after exercise. Using a randomized controlled design, the present study asked how a single bout of aerobic exercise affects a range of frontal- and medial temporal lobe-dependent cognitive functions and how long these effects last. We randomly assigned 85 subjects to either a vigorous intensity acute aerobic exercise group or a video watching control group. All subjects completed a battery of cognitive tasks both before and 30, 60, 90, or 120 min after the intervention. This battery included the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test-Revised, the Modified Benton Visual Retention Test, the Stroop Color and Word Test, the Symbol Digit Modalities Test, the Digit Span Test, the Trail Making Test, and the Controlled Oral Word Association Test. Based on these measures, composite scores were formed to independently assess prefrontal cortex- and hippocampal-dependent cognition. A three-way mixed Analysis of Variance was used to determine whether differences existed between groups in the change in cognitive function from pre- to post-intervention testing. Acute exercise improved prefrontal cortex- but not hippocampal-dependent functioning, with no differences found between delay groups. Vigorous acute aerobic exercise has beneficial effects on prefrontal cortex-dependent cognition and these effects can last for up to 2 hr after exercise. (JINS, 2015, 21, 791–801)
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S135561771500106X
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aerobics
Analysis of Variance
Brain research
Childrens television
Cognition & reasoning
Cognition - physiology
Cognitive ability
Exercise
Exercise - physiology
Female
Fitness equipment
Healthy Volunteers
Heart rate
Hippocampus - physiology
Humans
Male
Memory
Morphology
Neuropsychological Tests
Physical fitness
Physiology
Prefrontal Cortex - physiology
Rodents
Time Factors
Verbal Learning - physiology
Young Adult
title Acute Exercise Improves Prefrontal Cortex but not Hippocampal Function in Healthy Adults
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