4.6 Article

Acute physical exercise intensity, cognitive inhibition and psychological well-being in adolescent physical education students

Journal

CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 10, Pages 5030-5039

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12144-019-00454-z

Keywords

Adolescence; Cognitive inhibition; Well-being; Acute physical exercise

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Physical exercise can improve cognitive performance in tasks that require high cognitive inhibition, while different intensities of exercise may impact psychological well-being and positive affect differently.
Cognitive function and psychological well-being are two variables related to mental health. Several studies have shown that these variables are sensitive to acute physical exercise, but it is not known which doses of exercise are the most adaptive. To explore this issue, 35 adolescents performed three sessions of physical education with different intensities: no-exercise, light/moderate exercise, and moderate/vigorous exercise, controlling intensities with accelerometers. Stroop test and well-being questionnaires were used before and after each session. The repeated measures design showed that cognitive inhibition was significantly higher after physical exercise sessions than in the non-exercise session, with no differences between the exercise intensity conditions. Vitality increased only in the non-exercise session and positive affect increased and negative affect decreased after the light/moderate physical exercise session only. These results show that including physical exercise prior to performing tasks that require high cognitive inhibition may be a useful strategy to improve cognitive performance.

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