Exercise boosts children's ability to pay attention
From ANIWashington, Apr 1: A new study from University of Illinois has revealed that kids who are physically active have greater cognitive control or ability to pay attention, and perform better at school.
The research led by Charles Hillman, a professor of kinesiology and community health and the director of the Neurocognitive Kinesiology Laboratory at Illinois, showed that physical activity may increase students' cognitive control - or ability to pay attention - and also result in better performance on academic achievement tests.
"The goal of the study was to see if a single acute bout of moderate exercise - walking - was beneficial for cognitive function in a period of time afterward," Hillman said.
"This question has been asked before by our lab and others, in young adults and older adults, but it's never been asked in children. That's why it's an important question," he added.
During the study, the researchers recruited 20 nine-year-olds with eight girls and12 boys. They were asked to perform a series of stimulus-discrimination tests known as flanker tasks, to assess their inhibitory control.
On one day, students were tested following a 20-minute resting period; on another day, after a 20-minute session walking on a treadmill.
Later they were shown congruent and incongruent stimuli on a screen and were asked to push a button to respond to incongruencies.
"What we found is that following the acute bout of walking, children performed better on the flanker task," Hillman said.
"They had a higher rate of accuracy, especially when the task was more difficult. Along with that behavioural effect, we also found that there were changes in their event-related brain potentials (ERPs) - in these neuroelectric signals that are a covert measure of attentional resource allocation," he added.
For further understanding, the test measured performance in three areas: reading, spelling and math. Again, the researchers noted better test results following exercise.
Copyright Asian News International/DailyIndia.com
Currently trending: Michael Clarke, Cricket, David Beckham, Shahid Afridi, Tiger Woods, Lewis Hamilton, Robert Pattinson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ashley Cole, Wayne Rooney
Related News
Most Popular Stories
- 1. Hindu lawmakers walkout from Pak national assembly to protest links with terror slur
- 2. Clarke reveals little on break-up with Lara Bingle
- 3. Search for director of 'Breaking Dawn' on
- 4. Latest trend in UK: News mums heading for boobs jobs soon after having babies
- 5. Accent speaks louder than race when it comes to making friends
- Breaking News
- · Pranab to talk with opponents of Women's Reservation Bill
- · India can quiz 26/11 convict Headley in US
- · Strategic dialogue between US-Pak should be all encompassing: Gilani
- · Indians mulling multi-million pound football league on lines of IPL
- · Porn star mistress reveals Tiger Woods’ sex texts
- · Chandigarh terror threat part reason behind Lee’s return to Sydney for recovery
- · Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak created in 3D
- · Paris police releases two persons arrested in Brit kid’s kidnapping case
- · Freed Brit toddler reunites with family in London
- · Arrests of Taliban leaders by Pak blocked ‘secret’ talks with Taliban: UN official







