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    Effects of acute high-intensity exercise on cognitive performance in trained individuals: a systematic review

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    Date
    2017
    Author
    Browne, Sarah E.
    Howatson, Glyn
    Flynn, Mark J.
    O'Neill, Barry V.
    Bell, Phillip G.
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    Abstract
    BACKGROUND: High-intensity exercise is generally considered to have detrimental effects on cognition. However, high fitness levels are suggested to alleviate this effect. OBJECTIVES: The specific objective of this review was to evaluate the literature on the effect of acute high-intensity exercise on cognitive performance in trained individuals. METHODS: Studies were sourced through electronic databases, reference lists of retrieved articles, and manual searches of relevant reviews. Included studies examined trained participants, included a high-intensity exercise bout, used a control or comparison group/condition, and assessed cognitive performance via general laboratory tasks during or ≤10min following exercise cessation. RESULTS: Ten articles met the inclusion criteria. Results indicated that the effect of acute high-intensity exercise on cognitive performance in trained individuals is dependent on the specific cognitive domain being assessed. Generally, simple tasks were not affected, while the results on complex tasks remain ambiguous. Accuracy showed little tendency to be influenced by high-intensity exercise compared to measures of speed. CONCLUSION: Multiple factors influence the acute exercise-cognition relationship and thus future research should be highly specific when outlining criteria such as fitness levels, exercise intensity, and exercise mode. Furthermore, greater research is needed assessing more cognitive domains, greater exercise durations/types, and trained populations at high intensities
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10394/26325
    https://www.elsevier.com/books/sport-and-the-brain-the-science-of-preparing-enduring-and-winning-part-b/wilson/978-0-12-811825-2
    https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.pbr.2017.06.003
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