1998
DOI: 10.1080/001401398187297
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State-dependent memory produced by aerobic exercise

Abstract: In a free recall experiment, participants learned lists of words in two physiological states: at rest and while exercising aerobically on a bicycle ergometer. Recall of the words was required in either the state consistent with learning or in the alternative state. Word lists learned during aerobic exercise were recalled best during aerobic exercise and vice versa. Greater changes in heart rate in the changed state conditions were associated with greater retrieval decrements. Recall levels for words both learn… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…As described above, this includes the system aspects, the user and other involved human actors, the interaction between these, and the factors that govern this interaction. This approach is particularly relevant to the study of PIM because previous work has revealed that people re-find based on what they can remember ) and what they remember tends to be influenced by the surrounding context (Smith, 1988;Ellis and Ashbrook, 1991;Miles and Hardman, 1998), the interaction process with the information Thompson et al, 1996) and other people associated with the information in some way . Therefore, each of the aspects considered in the cognitive framework (depicted in figure 1 )play an important role in PIM behaviours.…”
Section: The Cognitive Foundation Of My Thesismentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As described above, this includes the system aspects, the user and other involved human actors, the interaction between these, and the factors that govern this interaction. This approach is particularly relevant to the study of PIM because previous work has revealed that people re-find based on what they can remember ) and what they remember tends to be influenced by the surrounding context (Smith, 1988;Ellis and Ashbrook, 1991;Miles and Hardman, 1998), the interaction process with the information Thompson et al, 1996) and other people associated with the information in some way . Therefore, each of the aspects considered in the cognitive framework (depicted in figure 1 )play an important role in PIM behaviours.…”
Section: The Cognitive Foundation Of My Thesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The aspects that form the basis for investigation within the holistic cognitive framework are depicted in Figure This approach is particularly relevant to the study of PIM because previous work has revealed that people re-find based on what they can remember [Capra and Perez-Chapter 1. Introduction Quinones, 2005] and what they remember tends to be influenced by the surrounding context Miles and Hardman, 1998;Smith, 1988], the interaction process with the information Thompson et al, 1996] and other people associated with the information in some way ]. Therefore, each of the aspects shown in Figure 1.1 play an important role in PIM behaviours.…”
Section: Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, we predicted that old or new accuracy and the FN400 old/new effect reflecting the familiarity process would be less influenced by acute aerobic exercise. Prior studies have provided conflicting findings regarding the direction of these effects (i.e., negative or positive) of acute aerobic exercise on retrieval performance (Miles & Hardman, 1998;SchmidtKassow et al, 2013SchmidtKassow et al, , 2014. Accordingly, although we expected that negative and positive effects of aerobic exercise would be reflected by decreased and increased source accuracy and parietal old/new effect, respectively, we did not make any specific a priori predictions about the direction of the effects.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When cognitive tasks were performed during exercise, exercise had adverse effects for 11-20 min and benefits after 20 min. Although these recent metaanalyses have indicated the effects of simultaneous exercise on cognitive function, studies on the effects of acute exercise during the encoding stage on memory functions have been infrequent and controversial; moreover, the existing evidence shows both negative (Miles & Hardman, 1998) and positive effects (SchmidtKassow et al, 2013(SchmidtKassow et al, , 2014. Hence, this study was designed to clarify how hippocampus-dependent memory functions are affected when the encoding phase of a memory task is conducted during acute aerobic exercise.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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