“…To our knowledge, our study was the first to directly examine the interaction between gender and exercise on mnemonic discrimination performance, and to report this gender difference (favoring females) in self-reported exercise effects on spatial pattern separation. Prior studies examining mnemonic discrimination and exercise or cardiorespiratory fitness have either controlled for gender as a covariate in the analyses (Bernstein & McNally, 2019; Bullock et al., 2018; Heisz et al., 2017; Kern et al., 2021; Nauer, Schon, et al., 2020; Nauer, Dunne, et al., 2020; Maass et al., 2015; Suwabe, Hyodo, Byun, Ochi, Fukuie, et al., 2017), or did not analyze gender separately (Chaire et al., 2020; Dèry et al., 2013; Kovacevic et al., 2020; Suwabe, Hyodo, Byun, Ochi, Yassa, et al., 2017; Suwabe et al., 2018), perhaps due to limitations in participant sample sizes. In fact, sex differences in exercise effects on cognition have largely been underexplored, especially with regard to memory function (Loprinzi & Frith, 2018).…”