Publication | Open Access
Dynamic Associations of Change in Physical Activity and Change in Cognitive Function: Coordinated Analyses of Four Longitudinal Studies
55
Citations
26
References
2012
Year
Physical ActivityAdapted Physical ActivityCognitionSocial SciencesBaseline Physical ActivityKinesiologyExercisePhysical ExerciseDynamic AssociationsHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceCognitive VariableRehabilitationCognitive FunctionBehavior Change (Individual)Childhood Physical ActivityLifestyle ChangeHuman MovementExercise Performance
The present study used a coordinated analyses approach to examine the association of physical activity and cognitive change in four longitudinal studies. A series of multilevel growth models with physical activity included both as a fixed (between-person) and time-varying (within-person) predictor of four domains of cognitive function (reasoning, memory, fluency, and semantic knowledge) was used. Baseline physical activity predicted fluency, reasoning and memory in two studies. However, there was a consistent pattern of positive relationships between time-specific changes in physical activity and time-specific changes in cognition, controlling for expected linear trajectories over time, across all four studies. This pattern was most evident for the domains of reasoning and fluency.
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