Effects of Physical Exercise Breaks on Executive Function in a Simulated Classroom Setting: Uncovering a Window into the Brain
Abstract: Acknowledging the detrimental effects of prolonged sitting, this study examined the effects of an acute exercise break during prolonged sitting on executive function, cortical hemodynamics, and microvascular status. In this randomized crossover study, 71 college students completed three conditions: (i) uninterrupted sitting (SIT); (ii) SIT with a 15 min moderate‐intensity cycling break (MIC); and (iii) SIT with a 15 min vigorous‐intensity cycling break (VIC). Behavioral outcomes, retinal vessel diameters (central retinal artery equivalents [CRAE], retinal vein equivalents [CRVE], arteriovenous ratio [AVR]), cortical activation, and effective connectivity were evaluated. Linear mixed models identified significant positive effects of exercise conditions on behavioral reaction time (RT), error rate, and inverse efficiency score (β = −2.62, −0.19, −3.04: ps < 0.05). MIC and VIC conditions produced pre‐to‐post‐intervention increases in CRAE and CRVE (β = 4.46, 6.34), frontal activation, and resting‐state and task‐state causal density (β = 0.37, 0.06) (ps < 0.05) compared to SIT; VIC was more beneficial for executive function and neurobiological parameters. The effect of AVR on average RT was mediated through task‐based causal density (indirect effect: −0.82). Acutely interrupting prolonged sitting improves executive function, microvascular status, and cortical activation and connectivity, with causal density mediating the microvascular‐executive function link.
- Standort
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Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
- Umfang
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Online-Ressource
- Sprache
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Englisch
- Erschienen in
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Effects of Physical Exercise Breaks on Executive Function in a Simulated Classroom Setting: Uncovering a Window into the Brain ; day:25 ; month:11 ; year:2024 ; extent:17
Advanced science ; (25.11.2024) (gesamt 17)
- Urheber
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Yu, Qian
Zhang, Zhihao
Ludyga, Sebastian
Erickson, Kirk I.
Cheval, Boris
Hou, Meijun
Pindus, Dominika M.
Hillman, Charles H.
Kramer, Arthur F.
Falck, Ryan S.
Liu‐Ambrose, Teresa
Kuang, Jin
Mullen, Sean P.
Kamijo, Keita
Ishihara, Toru
Raichlen, David A.
Heath, Matthew
Moreau, David
Werneck, André O.
Herold, Fabian
Zou, Liye
- DOI
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10.1002/advs.202406631
- URN
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urn:nbn:de:101:1-2411251332363.292844103195
- Rechteinformation
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Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
- Letzte Aktualisierung
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15.08.2025, 07:29 MESZ
Datenpartner
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Beteiligte
- Yu, Qian
- Zhang, Zhihao
- Ludyga, Sebastian
- Erickson, Kirk I.
- Cheval, Boris
- Hou, Meijun
- Pindus, Dominika M.
- Hillman, Charles H.
- Kramer, Arthur F.
- Falck, Ryan S.
- Liu‐Ambrose, Teresa
- Kuang, Jin
- Mullen, Sean P.
- Kamijo, Keita
- Ishihara, Toru
- Raichlen, David A.
- Heath, Matthew
- Moreau, David
- Werneck, André O.
- Herold, Fabian
- Zou, Liye