Shibasaki Manabu, Namba Mari, Kamijo Yoshi-Ichiro, Ito Tomoyuki, Kakigi Ryusuke, Nakata Hiroki
Faculty of Human Life and Environment, Department of Health Sciences, Nara Women's University, Nara, Japan.
Graduate School of Humanities and Sciences, Nara Women's University, Nara, Japan.
Physiol Rep. 2019 Feb;7(4):e14003. doi: 10.14814/phy2.14003.
Cognitive performances may improve after acute moderate exercise, but not after prolonged and/or heavy exercise. The present study aimed to investigate the effects of environmental temperature during exercise on human cognitive processing. Fifteen healthy males performed four bouts of a 15-min cycling exercise with a 10-min rest between each bout, and event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in five sessions during somatosensory Go/No-go paradigms (i.e., Pre, post-first exercise bout, post-second exercise bout, post-third exercise bout, and post-fourth exercise bout) in an environmental chamber with temperature controlled at 20°C (Temperate) and 35°C (Hot). Increases in external canal temperature and heart rate were greater under the 35°C condition than under the 20°C condition. Regardless of thermal conditions, reaction times (RT) and error rates were not affected by the repetition of moderate exercise, whereas the peak amplitude of the N140 component, which is mainly related to somatosensory processing, was significantly reduced with the repetition of the exercise. However the peak amplitude of P300, which is linked to cognitive processes of context updating, context closure, and event-categorization, was significantly smaller in post-third and post-fourth exercise bouts under the 35°C condition than under the 20°C condition, and this decrease was more prominent in No-go trials under the 35°C condition. These results suggest that executive function, which is based on RTs and error rates, is not affected by prolonged exercise and different thermal conditions, whereas the exercise in a hot environment impairs human cognitive processing, particularly response inhibition.
急性适度运动后认知表现可能会改善,但长时间和/或剧烈运动后则不会。本研究旨在调查运动期间环境温度对人类认知处理的影响。15名健康男性进行了4组15分钟的自行车运动,每组运动之间休息10分钟,并在体感Go/No-go范式的五个阶段(即运动前、第一次运动后、第二次运动后、第三次运动后和第四次运动后)记录事件相关电位(ERP),实验在温度控制为20°C(温带)和35°C(炎热)的环境舱中进行。35°C条件下外耳道温度和心率的升高幅度大于20°C条件下。无论热条件如何,反应时间(RT)和错误率均不受适度运动重复的影响,而主要与体感处理相关的N140成分的峰值幅度随着运动的重复而显著降低。然而,与情境更新、情境闭合和事件分类的认知过程相关的P300的峰值幅度在35°C条件下的第三次和第四次运动后明显小于20°C条件下,并且这种降低在35°C条件下的No-go试验中更为明显。这些结果表明,基于反应时间和错误率的执行功能不受长时间运动和不同热条件的影响,而在炎热环境中运动会损害人类认知处理,尤其是反应抑制。