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- s13423-012-0345-4 author "Guiney H, Machado L".
- s13423-012-0345-4 doi "10.3758/s13423-012-0345-4".
- s13423-012-0345-4 isCitedBy Inhibitory_control_test.
- s13423-012-0345-4 isCitedBy Neurobiological_effects_of_physical_exercise.
- s13423-012-0345-4 isCitedBy Neuroplasticity.
- s13423-012-0345-4 isCitedBy Prefrontal_cortex.
- s13423-012-0345-4 issue "1".
- s13423-012-0345-4 journal "Psychon Bull Rev".
- s13423-012-0345-4 pages "73–86".
- s13423-012-0345-4 pmid "23229442".
- s13423-012-0345-4 quote "Executive functions are strategic in nature and depend on higher-order cognitive processes that underpin planning, sustained attention, selective attention, resistance to interference, volitional inhibition, working memory, and mental flexibility ... Data to date from studies of aging provide strong evidence of exercise-linked benefits related to task switching, selective attention, inhibition of prepotent responses, and working memory capacity; furthermore, cross-sectional fitness data suggest that working memory updating could potentially benefit as well. In young adults, working memory updating is the main executive function shown to benefit from regular exercise, but cross-sectional data further suggest that task-switching and post-error performance may also benefit. In children, working memory capacity has been shown to benefit, and cross-sectional data suggest potential benefits for selective attention and inhibitory control. ... Support for the idea that higher levels of aerobic activity may be associated with superior brain structure has been gained through cross-sectional studies in older adults and children . ... only those in the aerobic exercise group exhibited improved connectivity between the left and right prefrontal cortices, two areas that are crucial to the effective functioning of the fronto-executive network. ... Together, these studies provide evidence that regular aerobic exercise benefits control over responses during selective attention in older adults. ... aerobic fitness is a good predictor of performance on tasks that rely relatively heavily on inhibitory control over prepotent responses and also that regular aerobic exercise improves performance on such tasks ... Overall, the results from the span and Sternberg tasks suggest that regular exercise can also confer benefits for the volume of information that children and older adults can hold in mind at one time.".
- s13423-012-0345-4 title "Benefits of regular aerobic exercise for executive functioning in healthy populations".
- s13423-012-0345-4 volume "20".
- s13423-012-0345-4 year "February 2013".