Moutoussamy Ilona, Taconnat Laurence, Angel Lucie, Pothier Kristell, Toussaint Lucette, Fay Séverine
Département de Psychologie, Centre de Recherches Sur La Cognition Et L'Apprentissage (UMR-CNRS, Université de Tours Et de Poitiers, Centre National de La Recherche Scientifique, 37000, Tours, France, 3 rue des Tanneurs.
Département de Psychologie, Psychologie Des Âges de La Vie Et Adaptation (EA 2114), Université de Tours, Tours, France.
Eur Rev Aging Phys Act. 2024 Mar 9;21(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s11556-024-00341-y.
Aging is marked by a memory decline related to an executive function decline. Physical activity (PA) has beneficial effects on both executive functions and memory, especially in aging. The protective effects of PA on these two cognitive abilities have always been studied separately, despite the well-established relationship between memory and executive functions. Our objective was to explore whether the benefits of PA on memory could be explained by reduced age-related changes in executive functions.Nineteen young adults (27.16 years old) and 25 older adults (69.64 years old) performed a resource-dependent memory task, three executive tasks and completed a PA questionnaire (measuring sports and leisure PA). Age group and PA effects on memory and executive performance were analyzed with generalized linear models. Mediation analyses were calculated using method of causal steps approach with a non-parametric bootstrapping procedure.The results confirmed the effects of age and PA on memory and executive performance. A significant interaction confirmed the protective effect of PA on age-related cognitive performance. PA was positively correlated with performance in both memory and executive tasks, but only in the older adults. Although each predictor alone (age, executive functions and PA) significantly explained memory performance in older adults, only the effect of PA on memory performance remained significant when all the predictors were introduced in the analyses.PA mediates the effects of age and executive functions on memory performance. This suggests that PA protects older adults against memory decline by reducing the decline in executive functioning.
衰老的特征是与执行功能衰退相关的记忆衰退。身体活动(PA)对执行功能和记忆都有有益影响,尤其是在衰老过程中。尽管记忆和执行功能之间的关系已得到充分证实,但PA对这两种认知能力的保护作用一直是分开研究的。我们的目标是探讨PA对记忆的益处是否可以通过减少与年龄相关的执行功能变化来解释。19名年轻人(27.16岁)和25名老年人(69.64岁)进行了一项依赖资源的记忆任务、三项执行任务,并完成了一份PA问卷(测量运动和休闲PA)。使用广义线性模型分析年龄组和PA对记忆及执行表现的影响。采用因果步骤法和非参数自抽样程序进行中介分析。结果证实了年龄和PA对记忆及执行表现的影响。显著的交互作用证实了PA对与年龄相关的认知表现的保护作用。PA与记忆和执行任务的表现呈正相关,但仅在老年人中如此。虽然每个预测因素单独(年龄、执行功能和PA)都能显著解释老年人的记忆表现,但在分析中引入所有预测因素时,只有PA对记忆表现的影响仍然显著。PA介导了年龄和执行功能对记忆表现的影响。这表明PA通过减少执行功能的衰退来保护老年人免受记忆衰退的影响。