Effects of acute exercise in the sitting position on executive function evaluated by the Stroop task in healthy older adults

  • Abe T
  • Fujii K
  • Hyodo K
  • et al.
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Abstract

[Purpose] Exercise effects on executive functioning depend on exercise mode. We tested the effects of three acute exercises in the sitting position-stepping, stretching, and finger movement-on older adults' executive functioning in comparison to a resting state (i.e., control condition). [Subjects and Methods] Participants were 26 healthy older adults (mean age, 71.8 ± 4.7 years). All participants performed the three sitting exercises for 10 minutes; resting for an equal amount of time was used as a control condition. These four conditions were presented in random order. The color-word matching Stroop task was used to evaluate executive function before and after the sitting exercises and control condition. [Results] All three sitting exercises significantly reduced Stroop interference scores, while the control condition did not. There was a significant difference between the finger movement exercise and the control condition in pre-to-post-intervention changes in Stroop interference scores. [Conclusion] The acute finger movement exercise was especially beneficial for executive function as evaluated by the color-word matching Stroop task.

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APA

Abe, T., Fujii, K., Hyodo, K., Kitano, N., & Okura, T. (2018). Effects of acute exercise in the sitting position on executive function evaluated by the Stroop task in healthy older adults. Journal of Physical Therapy Science, 30(4), 609–613. https://doi.org/10.1589/jpts.30.609

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