The relationship between cardiorespiratory fitness and inhibitory control following acute stress: An ERP study

Author:

Chu Chien‐Heng1ORCID,Huang I‐Lun1,Hillman Charles H.234,Chen Nai‐Chi1,Yu Jeffrey1,Hung Chen‐Sin1,Chen Feng‐Tzu5,Chang Yu‐Kai167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan

2. Department of Psychology Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Physical Therapy, Movement, and Rehabilitation Sciences Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Center for Cognitive and Brain Health Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

5. Department of Kinesiology National Tsing Hua University Hsinchu Taiwan

6. Social Emotional Education and Development Center National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan

7. Institute for Research Excellence in Learning Science National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan

Abstract

AbstractAlthough the relationships among acute stress, cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF), and cognitive function have been examined, whether CRF is related to behavioral and neuroelectric indices of inhibitory control following acute stress remains unknown. The purpose of the current study was to investigate the combined influence of acute stress and CRF on inhibitory control. Participants, aged 20–30 years, were stratified into the Higher‐Fit (n = 31) and the Lower‐Fit (n = 32) groups, and completed a Stroop task following the modified Maastricht Acute Stress Test (MAST) in the stress condition and the sham‐MAST in the non‐stress condition, during which electroencephalography was recorded. Behavioral (i.e., response time and accuracy) and neuroelectric (N2 and P3b components of the event‐related potential) outcomes of inhibitory control were obtained. While the Higher‐Fit group demonstrated shorter response times and higher accuracy than the Lower‐Fit group following both the MAST and the sham‐MAST, they also exhibited selective benefits of acute stress on inhibitory control performance (i.e., decreased response times and diminished interference scores). CRF‐dependent alterations in neuroelectric indices were also observed, with the Higher‐Fit group displaying smaller N2 and greater P3b amplitudes than the Lower‐Fit group following the sham‐MAST, and increased N2 and attenuated P3b amplitudes following the MAST. Collectively, these findings not only confirm the positive relationship between CRF and inhibitory control but also provide novel insights into the potential influence of CRF on inhibitory control and associated neuroelectric activity following acute stress.

Publisher

Wiley

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