| Literature DB >> 28018195 |
Chelsea M Stillman1, Jamie Cohen2, Morgan E Lehman3, Kirk I Erickson4.
Abstract
Physical activity (PA) is known to maintain and improve neurocognitive health. However, there is still a poor understanding of the mechanisms by which PA exerts its effects on the brain and cognition in humans. Many of the most widely discussed mechanisms of PA are molecular and cellular and arise from animal models. While information about basic cellular and molecular mechanisms is an important foundation from which to build our understanding of how PA promotes cognitive health in humans, there are other pathways that could play a role in this relationship. For example, PA-induced changes to cellular and molecular pathways likely initiate changes to macroscopic properties of the brain and/or to behavior that in turn influence cognition. The present review uses a more macroscopic lens to identify potential brain and behavioral/socioemotional mediators of the association between PA and cognitive function. We first summarize what is known regarding cellular and molecular mechanisms, and then devote the remainder of the review to discussing evidence for brain systems and behavioral/socioemotional pathways by which PA influences cognition. It is our hope that discussing mechanisms at multiple levels of analysis will stimulate the field to examine both brain and behavioral mediators. Doing so is important, as it could lead to a more complete characterization of the processes by which PA influences neurocognitive function, as well as a greater variety of targets for modifying neurocognitive function in clinical contexts.Entities:
Keywords: brain; cognition; exercise; mechanisms; mediation; physical activity
Year: 2016 PMID: 28018195 PMCID: PMC5161022 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Evidence for mechanisms of PA at Level 2 of analysis.
| Lead author | Year | Sample | Mechanistic finding | Type mediation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albinet | 2014 | 34 older adults (all female) | Increases in cerebral oxygen responses in the right DLPFC partially mediate relationship between aerobic fitness and executive control performance | Statistical |
| Chaddock | 2010 | 49 preadolescent children | Hippocampal volume mediates relationship between aerobic fitness and relational memory | Statistical |
| Chaddock-Heyman | 2013 | 23 preadolescent children | Increases in prefrontal activation and executive functioning following a 9-month aerobic exercise intervention | Experimental |
| Colcombe | 2004 | 41 older adults (study 1); 29 older adults (study 2) | Greater activation in prefrontal, parietal, and anterior cingulate cortex, and well as increased cognitive control performance in higher aerobically fit (Study 1) or aerobically trained (Study 2) individuals | Statistical (Study 1); Experimental (Study 2) |
| Erickson | 2009 | 165 older adults | Hippocampal volume mediates relationship between cardiorespiratory fitness and spatial memory | Statistical |
| Erickson | 2011 | 120 older adults | Volume of the hippocampus and memory performance increase following a 12-month aerobic exercise intervention | Experimental |
| Hillman | 2014 | 221 preadolescent children | Frontal activation, cognitive inhibition, and flexibility increases following 9-month aerobic exercise intervention | Experimental |
| Hyodo | 2015 | 60 male older adults | Activation of left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex mediates relationship between fitness and cognitive control | Statistical |
| Kamijo | 2011 | 43 preadolescent children | Increases in cognitively relevant frontal ERP component (CNV) and in working memory following a 9-month aerobic exercise intervention | Experimental |
| Kraft | 2014 | 43 overweight children | Activity increases in the anterior cingulate cortex and decreases in precentral gyrus and parietal cortex following 8-month aerobic exercise intervention; Improved cognitive control performance | Experimental ∗No group × Time interactions for any neurocognitive outcome |
| Krogh | 2014 | 79 clinically depressed older adults | Positive association between change in hippocampal volume and changes in memory following a 3-month aerobic exercise intervention | Experimental ∗Issues with adherence; no group × Time interactions |
| Maass | 2015 | 40 older adults | Hippocampal volume, perfusion, and memory increases following a 3-month aerobic exercise intervention; Changes in perfusion statistically mediate relationship between volume and memory | Experimental and Statistical |
| Makizako | 2015 | 310 older adults with MCI | Hippocampal volume mediates the association between PA and memory in older adults with MCI | Statistical |
| Oberlin | 2016 | 241 older adults across two studies | White matter integrity mediates relationship between fitness and spatial working memory | Statistical |
| Pajonk | 2010 | 24 schizophrenic patients | Hippocampal volume and short-term memory improve following 3-month aerobic exercise intervention; Changes in volume correlate with changes in memory | Experimental |
| Ruscheweyh | 2012 | 62 older adults | Positive association between changes in PA and episodic memory following a 6 months mixed-intensity intervention no longer significant after accounting for the variance associated with change in anterior cingulate gray matter volume | Experimental ∗No group × Time interactions |
| Ten Brinke | 2015 | 86 female older adults | Hippocampal volume increases following 6-month aerobic exercise intervention. Changes in volume negatively associated with changes in short-term memory | Experimental |
| Verstynen | 2012 | 179 older adults | Volume of the caudate nucleus mediates relationship between fitness and cognitive flexibility | Statistical |
| Voss | 2010 | 62 older adults | Connectivity of large-scale brain networks and executive functioning improve following 6-month aerobic exercise intervention; changes in connectivity correlate with changes in executive functioning. | Experimental |
| Voss | 2013a | 70 older adults | Improved fitness is associated with changes in prefrontal and temporal white matter integrity following a 12-month aerobic exercise intervention; no changes in short-term memory performance reported between groups; no mediation model could be tested | Experimental ∗No group × Time interaction for neurocognitive outcome |
| Weinstein | 2012 | 142 older adults | Volume of prefrontal cortex mediates the relationship between cardiorespiratory fitness and working memory, as well as that between fitness and inhibitory control | Statistical |
| Wong | 2015 | 128 older adults | Greater anterior cingulate cortex activation mediates relationship between fitness and dual task performance | Statistical |
Evidence for mechanisms of PA at Level 3 of analysis.
| Lead author | Year | Sample | Mechanistic finding | Type of mediation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albinet | 2016 | 36 older adults | Improvements in cognition following a 21-week exercise intervention are independent of improvements in mood | Experimental |
| Blumenthal | 1989 | 101 older adults | A 4-month exercise intervention improves mood symptoms in males, but does not show any clear pattern of improvements in cognition | Experimental |
| Blumenthal | 1991 | 101 older adults | 4, 8, or 14 months of exercise training does not improve cognitive task performance | Experimental |
| Emery | 1998 | 73 Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder patients | Exercise improves verbal fluency and reduces depressive symptoms compared to baseline scores and non-exercising groups | Experimental |
| King | 1997 | 43 older adults | Improvements in self-rated sleep quality in exercising group following 16-week exercise intervention | Statistical |
| Lichtman | 1983 | 64 young and mid-life adults | A 4-month exercise intervention improves performance on the Stroop Task | Statistical |
| Madden | 1989 | 85 older adults and 24 younger adults | 4 or 8 months of exercise does not improve cognitive task performance | Experimental |
| Robitaille | 2014 | 470 older adults | Social support and cognitive engagement mediate the effects of PA on cognition | Statistical |
| Singh | 1997 | 32 older adults | Exercise improves self-rated sleep quality following a 10-week intervention | Statistical |
| Vance | 2005 | 158 older adults | Sedentary behavior has significant indirect associations with neurocognitive functioning through depression and social support | Statistical |
| Wilckens | in press | 109 adults (59 younger, 50 older) | Sleep mediates the relationship between PA and executive functioning | Statistical |
| Williams | 1997 | 187 older women | Exercise improves performance on tests of memory and processing speed following a 12-month intervention. Depression and anxiety symptoms decrease following the intervention for participants reporting the highest symptoms at baseline, though not differently from the non-exercising group. | Experimental ∗No group × Time interaction for mood outcomes |