Acute, intermediate intensity exercise, and speed and accuracy in working memory tasks: a meta-analytical comparison of effects
- PMID: 21163278
- DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2010.12.007
Acute, intermediate intensity exercise, and speed and accuracy in working memory tasks: a meta-analytical comparison of effects
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare, using meta-analytic techniques, the effect of acute, intermediate intensity exercise on the speed and accuracy of performance of working memory tasks. It was hypothesized that acute, intermediate intensity exercise would have a significant beneficial effect on response time and that effect sizes for response time and accuracy data would differ significantly. Random-effects meta-analysis showed a significant, beneficial effect size for response time, g=-1.41 (p<0.001) but a significant detrimental effect size, g=0.40 (p<0.01), for accuracy. There was a significant difference between effect sizes (Z(diff)=3.85, p<0.001). It was concluded that acute, intermediate intensity exercise has a strong beneficial effect on speed of response in working memory tasks but a low to moderate, detrimental one on accuracy. There was no support for a speed-accuracy trade-off. It was argued that exercise-induced increases in brain concentrations of catecholamines result in faster processing but increases in neural noise may negatively affect accuracy.
2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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