Endurance exercise selectively impairs prefrontal-dependent cognition.
Author: Dietrich A, Sparling PB.
Source:
Brain and cognition, 55(3), 516-524.
Two experiments are reported that examine the possibility that exercise
selectively influences different types of cognition. To our knowledge, these
experiments represent the first attempt to study higher-cognitive processes
during exercise. Theoretical thinking was guided by the transient hypofrontality
hypothesis. In both experiments, athletes who exercised at a sustained, moderate
pace were compared to sedentary controls on two neuropsychological tests, one
that is generally regarded as heavily dependent on prefrontal cognition and one
that is relatively insensitive to prefrontal operation. Results showed that
during exercise performance on tests demanding prefrontal-dependent cognition was
impaired, while at the same time, cognitive processes requiring little prefrontal
activity were unaffected.