| Literature DB >> 23326664 |
Amira Abou-Dest1, Cédric T Albinet, Geoffroy Boucard, Michel Audiffren.
Abstract
This study examined whether regular swimming in older adults was related to better cognitive functioning and whether there were any global or selective positive effects of this physical activity (PA) on cognition. The cognitive performances of three groups of sixteen volunteer participants (young adults, sedentary older adults, and older adults who regularly practice swimming) were evaluated using a multitask approach. All participants performed a battery of ten tasks: two reaction time tasks assessing information processing speed and eight experimental tasks assessing three executive functions (EFs), (behavioral inhibition, working memory updating, and cognitive flexibility). The results showed that young adults performed significantly better than older adults on all examined cognitive functions. However, in older adults, regular swimming was related to better performance on the three EFs, but not on information processing speed. More precisely, five experimental tasks out of the eight tapping EFs were shown to be sensitive to positive effects from swimming practice. Finally, the demonstrated benefits of swimming on EFs were not necessarily linked to better cardiorespiratory fitness. The present findings illustrate the validity of using a multitask approach in examining the potential benefits of regular PA on cognitive aging.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23326664 PMCID: PMC3541603 DOI: 10.1155/2012/273185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Res ISSN: 2090-2204
Characteristics of the three groups of participants.
| Characteristics | Young adults | Active older adults | Sedentary older adults | Young versus older adults | Active versus Sedentary |
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| 16 | 16 | 16 |
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| Gender M/F | 9/7 | 9/7 | 9/7 |
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| Age (years) | 23.56 (2.56) | 69.13 (3.88) | 69.25 (3.25) |
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| MMSE (max = 30) | 29.31 (0.01) | 28.75 (0.93) | 28.69 (1.08) |
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| Education (years) | 16.09 (1.25) | 13.75 (3.11) | 13.56 (1.93) |
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| DPAS (max = 30) | — | 24.25 (1.48) | 15.17 (4.37) | — |
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| VO2max (mL/min/kg) | — | 29.35 (5.13) | 25.27 (4.94) | — |
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Note. M: Male, F: Female, MMSE: Mini Mental State Examination, DPAS: Dijon Physical Activity Score.
Matrix of correlations between the indices of cognitive performance, one index per cognitive task, for the whole sample.
| Dependent variable/Task | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
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| (1) Auditory SRT | 1.00 | |||||||||
| (2) Visual CRT |
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| (3) | −.05 | −.02 | 1.00 | |||||||
| (4) Interference cost | .42* | .43* |
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| (5) Adjacency score | .16 | .34* |
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| (6) NO correct letters | −.18 | −.29* | .10 | −.26 | −.56* | 1.00 | ||||
| (7) NO correct locations | −.30* | −.69* | −.03 | −.51* | −.63* |
| 1.00 | |||
| (8) NO perseverative errors | .23 | .30* | .04 | .40* | .58* | −.52* | −.55* | 1.00 | ||
| (9) Global switching cost | .08 | .54* | −.03 | .20 | .49* | −.51* | −.69* |
| 1.00 | |
| (10) Local switching cost | .25 | .46* | .01 | .20 | .46* | −.40* | −.44* |
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| 1.00 |
Note. SRT: Simple reaction time, CRT: Choice reaction time, P(I): Rate of successful inhibitions, *: P < .05, bold: Correlations within the same cognitive function.
Results of the MANCOVAs, ANCOVAs, and effect-sizes contrasting young and older participants on cognitive performance, with level of education as covariate, and mean behavioral performance for each age group (SD).
| Cognitive functions | Cognitive tasks | Dependent variables | MANCOVA F | ddl | Wilk's | Partial | ANCOVA F(1,44) | Cohen's | Young adults | Older adults M (SD) |
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| Stop-signal task | Rate of successful inhibition | 1.13 | 0.16 | 0.41 (0.15) | 0.44 (0.21) | |||||
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| Letter running-span task | NO correct responses | 2.69 | 0.80 | 39.19 (4.62) | 34.28 (7.35) | |||||
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| Wisconsin card sorting test | NO perseverative errors | 3.69 | 0.79 | 8.50 (2.68) | 12.81 (7.22) | |||||
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Note. RNG: Random Number Generation, in bold: Significant effect.
Results of the MANOVAs, ANOVAs, and effect-sizes contrasting active and sedentary older participants on cognitive performance and mean behavioral performance for each age group (SD).
| Cognitive function | Cognitive task | Dependent variable | MANOVA F | ddl | Wilk's | Partial | ANOVA F(1,45) | Cohen's | Sedentary older adults | Active older adults |
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| Auditory simple reaction time task | Reaction time (ms) | — | — | 252 (40) | 262 (64) | |||||
| Speed of information processing | 0.43 | 2, 44 | .98 | .02 | ||||||
| Visual choice reaction time task | Reaction time (ms) | — | — | 468 (49) | 482 (57) | |||||
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| Stop-signal task | Rate of successful inhibition | 0.00 | 0.02 | 0.44 (0.23) | 0.44 (0.20) | |||||
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| Stroop task | Interference cost (ms) |
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| 0.10 | 0.10 | 297 (132) | 285 (99) |
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| Dimension switching task | Global switch cost (ms) |
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| 2.65 | 0.68 | 704 (267) | 508 (306) |
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Note. RNG: Random Number Generation, in Bold: Significant effect.
Figure 1Scatter plots relating VO2max level and updating performance of verbal information (a) and global switch cost (b) in the older participants.