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. 2018 Nov 27;7(12):486.
doi: 10.3390/jcm7120486.

The Experimental Effects of Acute Exercise on Long-Term Emotional Memory

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The Experimental Effects of Acute Exercise on Long-Term Emotional Memory

Breanna Wade et al. J Clin Med. .

Abstract

Emerging work suggests that acute, moderate-intensity aerobic exercise may help to subserve episodic memory of neutral stimuli. Less investigated, however, is whether acute exercise is associated with enhanced memory recognition of emotional stimuli, which was the purpose of this experiment. A parallel-group randomized controlled experiment was employed. Participants (mean age = 20 yr) were randomized into an exercise (n = 17) or control group (n = 17). The exercise group engaged in a 15-min bout of moderate-intensity treadmill walking. Emotional memory recognition was assessed via images from the International Affective Picture System, including assessments of varying degrees of valence and arousal. Memory recognition was assessed at 1 day, 7 days, and 14 days post-memory encoding. We observed a significant main effect for time (F(2) = 104.2, p < 0.001, η²p = 0.77) and a significant main effect for valence⁻arousal classification (F(4) = 21.39, p < 0.001, η²p = 0.40), but there was no significant time by group interaction (F(2) = 1.09, p = 0.34, η²p = 0.03), classification by group interaction (F(4) = 0.12, p = 0.97, η²p = 0.01), time by classification interaction (F(8) = 1.78, p = 0.08, η²p = 0.05), or time by classification by group interaction (F(8) = 0.78, p = 0.62, η²p = 0.02). In conclusion, emotional memory recognition decreased over the 14-day follow-up period and this rate of memory decay was not altered by acute moderate-intensity exercise engagement. We discuss these findings in the context of exercise intensity and the temporal effects of exercise.

Keywords: amygdala; consolidation; emotional memory; physical activity.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Discrimination index (recognition memory) scores across the three time points (1 day, 7 days, 14 days), for both groups (exercise vs. control), and across all five valence classifications (negative valence-high arousal; negative valence-low arousal; neutral valence-neutral arousal; positive valence-high arousal; positive valence-low arousal). Results show that, across all valence classifications, recognition memory decreased over time, and to the same magnitude for both the exercise and control groups.

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