| Literature DB >> 34067861 |
Ana R Alves1,2,3, Renata Dias3, Henrique P Neiva2,4, Daniel A Marinho2,4, Mário C Marques2,4, António C Sousa2,4, Vânia Loureiro1,3,5, Nuno Loureiro1,3,6.
Abstract
Development of innovative and time-efficient strategies to involve youth in physical activity is pivotal in the actual inactivity pandemic. Moreover, physical activity may improve academic performance, of great interest for educators. This present systematic review aimed to analyze the effects of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on cognitive performance and psychological outcomes in youth. A database search (Web of Science, PubMed, Scopus, and PsycINFO) for original research articles was performed. A total of eight articles met the inclusion criteria, and the Cochrane risk of bias tool was used. The studies' results were recalculated to determine effect sizes using Cohen's d. Different HIIT interventions reported improvements on cognitive performance at executive function (d = 0.75, +78.56%), linguistic reasoning (d = 0.25, +7.66%), concentration (d = 0.71, +61.10%), selective attention (d = 0.81, +60.73%), non-verbal and verbal abilities (d = 0.88, +47.50%; d = 1.58, +22.61%, respectively), abstract reasoning (d = 0.75, +44.50%), spatial and numerical abilities (d = 37.19, +22.85%; d = 1.20, +8.28%, respectively), and verbal reasoning (d = 1.00, +15.71%) in youth. Regarding psychological outcomes, HIIT showed higher self-concept (d = 0.28, +8.71%) and psychological well-being in boys and girls (d = 0.73, +32.43%, d = 0.39, +11.58%, respectively). To sum up, HIIT interventions between 4-16 weeks, for 8-30 min/session, at ≥85% maximal heart rate, would provide positive effects on cognitive performance and psychological outcomes in youth.Entities:
Keywords: attention; concentration; evaluation; exercise; performance; self-concept; systematic review; well-being
Year: 2021 PMID: 34067861 PMCID: PMC8157174 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart of the search.
Characteristics of analyzed studies (N = 8).
| Authors | Sample/Group/Age (Years)/Country | Exercise Protocol | Cognitive, Psychological and Behavior Measures | Main Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Exercise Intervention | EF | EG1 EF (TMT B), d = 0.26, +11.45% | |
| [ | EG1: intermittent fast running for shorts periods + long active recovery periods (30 min, HIIT, ≥85 HRmax) | Psychological assessment | EG1 PSYA total score, d = 0.28, +8.71% | |
| [ | EG1: 3′ WU at 20 W + 8 × 1-min work intervals at 85% peak power interspersed with 75 s active recovery at 20 W + 2′ Stretch at 20 W | Affective responses | BAS/BIS with enjoyment responses | |
| [ | HIIT protocol: 3′ WU at 20 W + 8 × 1-min intervals at 90% peak power + 75 s recovery at 20 W + 2′ Stretch | Exercise Enjoyment | HIIT protocol in PACES score (boys, d = 0.73, + 32.43%; girls, d = 0.39, + 11.58%) | |
| [ | 2 sessions/week in 12-weeks intervention | Memory | EG1 selective attention, d = 0.29, +10.68% | |
| [ | Exercise Intervention | Cognitive Performance | EG1 (after training) selective attention, d = 0.81, + 60.73% | |
| [ | Exercise Intervention | Executive Function | EG1 DFS test total score d = 0.33, +10.56% | |
| [ | EG1: PE, 4 sessions (55 min)/week for 16 weeks | Cognitive Performance | Non-verbal abilities |
EG: experimental group; C = control group; PE: physical education classes; GMCardio: gross motor cardiorespiratory exercises; CombCR: combination of cardiorespiratory and body weight resistance training exercises; WU: warm-up; EF: execution function; PWB: psychological well-being; PSC: physical self-concept; PD: psychological distress; TMT: Trail Making Test; TA: Trail A; TB: Trail B; DFS/DBS test: Digit Span Forward/Backward test; ToH: Tower of Hanoi; GAS: gas exchange threshold; HIIT: high-intensity interval training; PACES: Physical Activity Enjoyment Scale; FS: feeling scale; EES: during exercise 7-point exercise enjoyment scale; PACES: post-exercise physical activity enjoyment scale; BAS: Behavioral Activation Scale; BIS: Behavioral Inhibition Scale; RPE: rating of perceived exertion; PSYA: psychological assessment; IGF-M: medium version of the Spanish Overall and Factorial Intelligence Test; d = effect size of Cohen’s d.
Figure 2Judgments about each risk-of-bias item for each included study.
Figure 3Risk-of-bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.