“…In addition to the population (fewer studies in young adults) and potential temporal effects of exercise on memory, three additional gaps in the literature include the exercise stimulus, memory type, and memory followâup period. With regard to the exercise stimulus, and despite animal work demonstrating that highâintensity exercise is effective in increasing postâsynaptic excitatory activity (Swiatkiewicz et al ., ) and longâterm memory (Wang & Wang, ), the majority of research in the young adult population (Miles & Hardman, ; Libkuman et al ., ; Covassin et al ., ; Sibley & Beilock, ; Labban & Etnier, ; Berman et al ., ; Gothe et al ., ; Nanda et al ., ; Basso et al ., ; Loprinzi & Kane, ; McNerney & Radvansky, ; Bantoft et al ., ; Hwang et al ., ) has employed moderateâintensity exercise protocols. Regarding memory type, all of the studies in the young adult population (Miles & Hardman, ; Libkuman et al ., ; Covassin et al ., ; Sibley & Beilock, ; Labban & Etnier, ; Berman et al ., ; Gothe et al ., ; Nanda et al ., ; Basso et al ., ; Loprinzi & Kane, ; McNerney & Radvansky, ; Bantoft et al ., ; Hwang et al ., ) have examined either retrospectiveârelated episodic memory, recognition memory, logical memory, working memory, longâterm memory, visuospatial memory, or verbal memory.…”