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Aging, exercise, and attention.
244
Citations
57
References
1992
Year
Physical ActivityAgingAttentionKinesiologyHealthy AgingLongevityExercisePhysical ExerciseHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceTask PerformanceRehabilitationAlternation SpeedLifespan AgingExercise ScienceCognitive PerformanceExercise PhysiologyOlder AdultsExercise EffectActive AgeingMedicineExercise PerformanceAging Process
The authors investigated the relationship among aging, attentional processes, and exercise in 2 experiments. First they examined age differences on 2 attentional tasks, a time-sharing task and an attentional flexibility task. Young adults alternated attention between 2 sequenced tasks more rapidly and time-shared the processing of 2 tasks more efficiently than older adults. They then investigated the effects of aerobic exercise on the same 2 attentional tasks in older adults. Following the 10-week exercise program, older exercisers showed substantially more improvement in alternation speed and time-sharing efficiency than older controls. Interestingly, this exercise effect was specific to dual-task processing. Both groups of subjects showed equivalent effects on single-task performance. These results indicate that aerobic exercise can exert a beneficial influence on the efficiency of at least 2 different attentional processes in older adults.
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