Abstract

Physical exercise has been shown to improve cognitive and neural functioning in older adults. The current study compared the effects of an acute bout of physical exercise with a bout of interactive mental and physical exercise (i.e., "exergaming") on executive (Stroop) task performance and event-related potential (ERP) amplitudes in younger and older adults. Results revealed enhanced executive task performance in younger and older adults after exercise, with no differences in performance between exercise conditions. Stroop (RT) performance in older adults improved more than in younger adults from pre- to post-exercise. A significant increase in EEG amplitude from pre- to post-exercise was found at the Cz site from 320 to 700ms post-stimulus for both younger and older adults, with older adults demonstrating a larger Stroop interference effect. While younger adults exhibited overall greater EEG amplitudes than older adults, they showed no differences between congruent and incongruent trials (i.e., minimal interference). Compared to peers with higher BMI (body mass index), older adults with lower BMI showed a greater reduction in Stroop interference effects from pre- to post-exercise. The beneficial effects of an acute bout of physical exercise on cognitive and neural functioning in younger and older adults were confirmed, with no difference between standard exercise and exergaming. Findings suggest that BMI, sometimes used as a proxy for fitness level, may modulate benefits that older adults derive from an acute bout of exercise. Findings have implications for future research that seeks to investigate unique effects of exergaming when compared to standard physical exercise.

Highlights

  • Physical exercise has been shown to improve cognitive and neural functioning in older adults

  • Compared to peers with higher body mass index (BMI), older adults with lower BMI showed a greater reduction in Stroop interference effects from pre- to postexercise

  • A recent meta-analysis revealed that cognitive performance during, immediately after and after a delay of up to 20 min of an acute bout of exercise was enhanced and that these effects are larger for older adults when compared with younger adults [6]

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Summary

Results

Means (SDs) of response times, error rates and EEG amplitudes for congruent and incongruent trials of the Stroop task for both younger and older adults at both pre- and posttest. Indicated that the Stroop effect was stronger for older adults than younger adults The RT data revealed a main effect of time (b = -0.18, SE = 0.01, t = -16.51, p \ 0.005), with participants performing faster overall post-exercise than pre-exercise. There was an Age 9 Congruency interaction, where older adults exhibited greater ERP amplitude during incongruent Stroop trials compared with congruent trials than younger adults (b = 0.78, SE = 0.32, t = 2.47, p = 0.01).

Discussion and conclusions
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