Carson Valerie, Hunter Stephen, Kuzik Nicholas, Wiebe Sandra A, Spence John C, Friedman Alinda, Tremblay Mark S, Slater Linda, Hinkley Trina
Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation, University of Alberta, Canada.
Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation, University of Alberta, Canada.
J Sci Med Sport. 2016 Jul;19(7):573-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jsams.2015.07.011. Epub 2015 Jul 10.
To comprehensively review all observational and experimental studies examining the relationship between physical activity and cognitive development during early childhood (birth to 5 years).
Systematic review.
Electronic databases were searched in July, 2014. No study design, date, or language limits were imposed on the search. Included studies had to be published, peer reviewed articles that satisfied the a priori determined population (apparently healthy children aged birth to 5 years), intervention (duration, intensity, frequency, or patterns of physical activity), comparator (various durations, intensity, or patterns of physical activity), and outcome (cognitive development) study criteria. Study quality and risk of bias were assessed in December 2014.
A total of seven studies, representing 414 participants from five different countries met the inclusion criteria, including two observational and five experimental studies. Six studies found increased or higher duration/frequency of physical activity had statistically significant (p<0.05) beneficial effects on at least one cognitive development outcome, including 67% of the outcomes assessed in the executive function domain and 60% in the language domain. No study found that increased or higher duration/frequency of physical activity had statistically significant detrimental effects on cognitive development. Six of the seven studies were rated weak quality with a high risk of bias.
This review provides some preliminary evidence that physical activity may have beneficial effects on cognitive development during early childhood. Given the shortage of the information and the weak quality of available evidence, future research is needed to strengthen the evidence base in this area.
全面回顾所有观察性和实验性研究,探讨幼儿期(出生至5岁)身体活动与认知发展之间的关系。
系统评价。
于2014年7月检索电子数据库。检索未设研究设计、日期或语言限制。纳入的研究必须是已发表的、经过同行评审的文章,且满足预先确定的人群(出生至5岁的貌似健康儿童)、干预措施(身体活动的持续时间、强度、频率或模式)、对照(身体活动的各种持续时间、强度或模式)以及结局(认知发展)研究标准。于2014年12月评估研究质量和偏倚风险。
共有7项研究符合纳入标准,代表来自5个不同国家的414名参与者,包括2项观察性研究和5项实验性研究。6项研究发现,身体活动时间或频率的增加对至少一项认知发展结局具有统计学显著(p<0.05)的有益影响,包括执行功能领域评估结局的67%以及语言领域评估结局的60%。没有研究发现身体活动时间或频率的增加对认知发展具有统计学显著的有害影响。7项研究中有6项被评为质量较弱且偏倚风险高。
本综述提供了一些初步证据,表明身体活动可能对幼儿期的认知发展具有有益影响。鉴于信息不足且现有证据质量较弱,未来需要开展研究以加强该领域的证据基础。