Litcius/Paper detail

Effects of acute aerobic and resistance exercise on episodic memory function

Paul D. Loprinzi, Jeremy P. Loenneke, Benjamin C. Storm

2021Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Accumulating research provides suggestive evidence that acute aerobic exercise may, potentially, enhance episodic memory function post-exercise. Limited research has evaluated whether acute resistance exercise may also enhance episodic memory post-exercise. Furthermore, whether these two exercise modalities have a differential effect on post-exercise episodic memory is relatively unknown. To address these research questions, three experimental studies were conducted ( N = 104) among young adults (18–25 years). The experiments implemented acute bouts of aerobic or resistance exercise for 15 min. Episodic memory was comprehensively evaluated post-exercise with a list-learning paradigm and a computerised assessment of what-where-when aspects of episodic memory. Various manipulations (e.g., between vs. within-group) of the study design were implemented across the experiments. Across these three experiments, we failed to find consistent evidence of either type of acute exercise affecting episodic memory performance post-exercise.

Topics & Concepts

Episodic memoryAerobic exercisePsychologyResistance trainingCognitive psychologyCognitionPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMedicinePhysical therapyNeuroscienceMemory Processes and InfluencesMemory and Neural MechanismsNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies