“…Maintaining oxygen supply and nutrient delivery to cerebral tissue is therefore of critical importance, both at rest and during exercise, as the brain has limited substrate storage (Willie, Tzeng, Fisher, & Ainslie, ). Cerebral blood flow velocity (CBV) has been shown to increase 10%â20% during moderate intensity exercise (~60%â70% of an individual's maximal oxygen uptake; VO 2max ), as a result of parallel increases of neuronal activity, metabolism, and regional CBV (Marsden et al, ; Ogoh & Ainslie, , ; Smith & Ainslie, ). During more intense exercise, CBV has been shown to either plateau or decrease, with the extent of reduction associated with the degree of hyperventilationâinduced cerebral vasoconstriction (Larsen, Rasmussen, Overgaard, Secher, & Nielsen, ; Ogoh & Ainslie, ; Smith & Ainslie, ; Subudhi et al, ).…”