Study reveals connection between fitness level, brain
activity, and executive function
Published on September 10, 2015
The aging process is associated with declines in brain
function, including memory and how fast our brain processes information, yet
previous research has found that higher levels of cardiorespiratory fitness in
older adults leads to better executive function in the brain, which helps with
reasoning and problem solving. Higher cardiorespiratory fitness levels have
also been found to increase brain volume in key brain regions.
A new study from a team at the Beckman Institute for
Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois reveals the
connection between brain activation, cardiorespiratory fitness, and executive
function in older adults, finding that dual-task processing in a core executive
function brain region is associated with higher cardiorespiratory fitness and
dual-task performance.
“Previous studies have shown that there’s a relationship
between cardiorespiratory fitness and behavioral performance in older adults.
Other studies have looked at cardiorespiratory fitness and brain function, but
really linking all three of those hasn’t been quite been done as explicitly as
we did in this paper,” said Chelsea Wong, a M.D./Ph.D. student at the
University of Illinois and first author on the paper, published in Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience.
We know that as people age, executive function declines, so
we found that with higher cardiorespiratory fitness, you can enhance executive
function performance behaviorally as well as executive function-related brain
activation.- Chelsea Wong
The team, led by Art Kramer, Beckman Institute director and
professor of psychology and neuroscience at Illinois, examined brain imaging
and fitness level data from 128 adults between the ages of 59-80.
With functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans
gathered in the Beckman Institute’s Biomedical Imaging Center, the researchers
found that certain regions of the brain were activated more when performing two
simultaneous tasks compared to a single task.
“The reason we looked at dual-task specifically is because
it’s a measure of executive function, which is required for multiple cognitive
processes, such as working memory, task management, coordination, and inhibition,”
said Wong. “We know that as people age, executive function declines, so we
found that with higher cardiorespiratory fitness, you can enhance executive
function performance behaviorally as well as executive function-related brain
activation.”
The team found the overall relationship between
cardiorespiratory fitness levels and higher executive function may be partially
explained through activation in a region of the brain called the anterior
cingulate cortex and the supplementary motor area (ACC/SMA).
“We analyzed areas of the brain that were activated while
the participants were completing two tasks, and found that the ACC/SMA
activation was associated with higher cardiorespiratory fitness. It’s an
important area for higher level functions, such as conflict monitoring,
multitasking, and dual-task processing itself,” said Wong.
“This research adds to our growing understanding of the
relationship among physical activity and cognitive and brain function—and
suggests that we can improve our brain health by changing our lifestyle even as
we age,” said Kramer.
This work was supported by the National Institute on Aging.
Article Source: http://beckman.illinois.edu/news/2015/09/fitness-level-brain-activity-executive-function
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