1Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, University of Limerick, IRELAND, and 2Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive, CNRS et Aix-Marseille Université, FRANCE.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2014 Mar;46(3):630-9. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0b013e3182a77980.
This study aimed to investigate the influence of an acute bout of moderate exercise and examine the potential lasting improvements over time in young and old adults within the same experimental paradigm over a 2-h testing period. The study was designed to assess the efficiency of selective control and the propensity to make fast impulsive reactions through the analyses of the percentage of correct responses (CAF) and the magnitude of the interference effect (delta curve) as a function of the latency of the response.
Twelve young (23 ± 2 yr) and 12 old (63 ± 2 yr) volunteers performed the Simon task while cycling (30 min of cycling at 65% of age-predicted HRmax) and after exercise cessation (post 5 min, post 35 min, and post 65 min).
Results showed that exercise did not alter cognitive control. The benefit on reaction time performance was evident for both age groups and persisted after cessation for 15-20 min. Distributional analyses showed that younger people have a higher propensity to commit impulsive errors during exercise, which was not evident in older adults. Older adults adopted more cautious strategies, especially when the risk to commit an error was elevated. Despite the larger mean interference effect compared to younger adults, the pattern of the delta curves attests to the existence of an efficient cognitive control in older people.
This study illustrates the effectiveness of distributional analyses and supports the idea that exercise-induced facilitation on cognitive performance can be realized across the lifespan. Future investigations should explore whether accumulated bouts of acute exercise could display an aggregate cognitive benefit, which may significantly affect independent functioning in older adults.
本研究旨在探讨急性中等强度运动的影响,并在 2 小时的测试期间内,通过同一实验范式,研究年轻人和老年人的即时效应和随时间的潜在持久改善。该研究旨在评估选择性控制的效率,并通过分析正确反应百分比(CAF)和干扰效应(delta 曲线)的幅度随反应潜伏期的变化,来评估快速冲动反应的倾向。
12 名年轻志愿者(23 ± 2 岁)和 12 名老年志愿者(63 ± 2 岁)在进行西蒙任务时进行骑车运动(以预测最大心率的 65%进行 30 分钟的骑车运动),并在运动停止后(停止后 5 分钟、停止后 35 分钟和停止后 65 分钟)进行测试。
结果表明,运动并没有改变认知控制。两种年龄组的反应时表现都有改善,且在停止运动后 15-20 分钟仍持续改善。分布分析表明,年轻人在运动时更倾向于犯冲动错误,而老年人则没有。老年人采取了更为谨慎的策略,尤其是在犯错风险较高时。尽管与年轻人相比,老年人的平均干扰效应较大,但 delta 曲线的模式表明老年人存在有效的认知控制。
本研究说明了分布分析的有效性,并支持了这样一种观点,即运动引起的认知表现改善可以在整个生命周期中实现。未来的研究应该探索急性运动的累积次数是否会产生累积的认知益处,这可能会对老年人的独立功能产生重大影响。