Selective Effects of Physical Exercise on Choice Reaction Processes
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by SAGE Publications in Perceptual and Motor Skills
- Vol. 87 (1) , 175-185
- https://doi.org/10.2466/pms.1998.87.1.175
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to examine the effects of an exercise of moderate intensity (60% of maximal aerobic power) on specific information-processing mechanisms. 22 students completed 3 10-min. exercise bouts on a bicycle ergometer. Concomitantly, participants performed six manual choice-reaction tasks manipulating task variables (Signal Intensity, Stimulus–Response Compatibility, and Time Uncertainty) on two levels. Reaction tests, randomly ordered, were administered at rest and during exercise. A significant underadditive interaction between Time Uncertainty and exercise was found for the highest quartiles of the distribution of reaction times. No other interaction effects were obtained for the other variables. These results reasonably support that moderate aerobic exercise showed selective rather than general influences on information processing.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cognitive Performance after Strenuous Physical ExercisePerceptual and Motor Skills, 1996
- EEG changes from long-term physical exerciseBiological Psychology, 1996
- Reliability and Within Subject Variability of V̇E, V̇O2, Heart Rate and Blood Pressure During Submaximum Cycle ErgometryInternational Journal of Sports Medicine, 1993
- Heart Rate and Exercise Intensity During Sports ActivitiesSports Medicine, 1988
- Effects of different types of physical activity on the performance of perceptual tasks in peripheral and central vision and coincident timingErgonomics, 1987
- Effects of Fatigue on Ability to Process Visual Information by Experienced OrienteersPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1986
- Energetical Issues in Research on Human Information ProcessingPublished by Springer Nature ,1986
- Personality, motivation, and performance: A theory of the relationship between individual differences and information processing.Psychological Review, 1984
- The Arousal-Performance Relationship RevisitedResearch Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1980
- Effects of amphetamine and barbiturate in a serial reaction task under paced and self-paced conditionsActa Psychologica, 1978