The effects of acute exercise on category-prompted and consonant-prompted word fluency in an institutionalized elderly sample

Regular bouts of strenuous exercise have been associated with improved functional status in the frail elderly. Chronic aerobic exercise has also been linked, though less conclusively, to improved cognitive functioning through improved oxygenation of the brain. A problem arises, however, if the level...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Underhill, Susan C.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/5892/
https://research.library.mun.ca/5892/1/Underhill_SusanC.pdf
https://research.library.mun.ca/5892/3/Underhill_SusanC.pdf
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Summary:Regular bouts of strenuous exercise have been associated with improved functional status in the frail elderly. Chronic aerobic exercise has also been linked, though less conclusively, to improved cognitive functioning through improved oxygenation of the brain. A problem arises, however, if the levels of exercise necessary to achieve these improvements are too strenuous to be performed by the very frail elderly. This paper investigates a possible relationship between acute non-strenuous exercise and improved cognitive performance in a sample of institutionalized older adults. The purpose of the present study is to replicate the results from a study conducted by Stones and Dawe (1993). This study will attempt to sort out task order effects that were problematic in the Stones and Dawe study. This will help to investigate the relationships between activity on two cognitive tasks, a category-prompted word fluency test and a consonant-prompted word fluency test. The present study will also attempt to clarify the time parameters of the benefits and to assess the effect of different physical ability levels on the magnitude of the exercise effects. The hypothesis tested is that a 15-minute non-strenuous exercise intervention will be sufficient to produce improved performance on a category-prompted word fluency task but not on a consonant-prompted task. -- Fifty-nine subjects volunteered from three nursing homes in the St. John's, Newfoundland area. The investigator randomly assigned subjects to one of four groups. The two exercise groups were exposed to 15-minutes of non-strenuous exercise. The control groups viewed a 15-minute video of similar exercises. Experimental group 1 and control group 1 completed a category-prompted word fluency task at pretest, immediate posttest, and 30-minute delayed posttest. Experimental group 2 and control group 2 completed a consonant-prompted word fluency task at the three testing times. -- I used a two (group) by two (task) by four (trials) by three (time) repeated measures ANOVA design ...