Acute Exercise and Motor Memory Consolidation: The Role of Exercise Timing

High intensity aerobic exercise amplifies offline gains in procedural memory acquired during motor practice. This effect seems to be evident when exercise is placed immediately after acquisition, during the first stages of memory consolidation, but the importance of temporal proximity of the exercis...

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Published inJournal of neural transplantation & plasticity Vol. 2016; no. 2016; pp. 1 - 11
Main Authors Lundbye-Jensen, Jesper, Roig, Marc, Christiansen, Lasse, Geertsen, Svend Sparre, Korsgaard Johnsen, Line, Lind, Rune Rasmussen, Beck, Mikkel Malling, Thomas, Richard, Ritz, Christian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cairo, Egypt Hindawi Publishing Corporation 01.01.2016
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Hindawi Limited
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Summary:High intensity aerobic exercise amplifies offline gains in procedural memory acquired during motor practice. This effect seems to be evident when exercise is placed immediately after acquisition, during the first stages of memory consolidation, but the importance of temporal proximity of the exercise bout used to stimulate improvements in procedural memory is unknown. The effects of three different temporal placements of high intensity exercise were investigated following visuomotor skill acquisition on the retention of motor memory in 48 young (24.0 ± 2.5 yrs), healthy male subjects randomly assigned to one of four groups either performing a high intensity (90% Maximal Power Output) exercise bout at 20 min (EX90), 1 h (EX90+1), 2 h (EX90+2) after acquisition or rested (CON). Retention tests were performed at 1 d (R1) and 7 d (R7). At R1 changes in performance scores after acquisition were greater for EX90 than CON ( p < 0.001 ) and EX90+2 ( p = 0.001 ). At R7 changes in performance scores for EX90, EX90+1, and EX90+2 were higher than CON ( p < 0.001 , p = 0.008 , and p = 0.008 , resp.). Changes for EX90 at R7 were greater than EX90+2 ( p = 0.049 ). Exercise-induced improvements in procedural memory diminish as the temporal proximity of exercise from acquisition is increased. Timing of exercise following motor practice is important for motor memory consolidation.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
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Academic Editor: Terry McMorris
ISSN:2090-5904
0792-8483
1687-5443
DOI:10.1155/2016/6205452