2013
DOI: 10.1123/jpah.10.4.488
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The Acute Effects of Yoga on Executive Function

Abstract: Background:Despite an increase in the prevalence of yoga exercise, research focusing on the relationship between yoga exercise and cognition is limited. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of an acute yoga exercise session, relative to aerobic exercise, on cognitive performance.Methods:A repeated measures design was employed where 30 female college-aged participants (Mean age = 20.07, SD = 1.95) completed 3 counterbalanced testing sessions: a yoga exercise session, an aerobic exercise session,… Show more

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Cited by 117 publications
(86 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…Cognition and emotion work interchangeably on psychosocial and biological levels [15], and thus inherently influence one another, particularly when considering mental health. Yoga has been shown to improve executive function, planning, and control abilities [16]. People who practice yoga are also shown to have greater emotional moderation due to increased attention resources [17].…”
Section: Body Mind Spirit Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cognition and emotion work interchangeably on psychosocial and biological levels [15], and thus inherently influence one another, particularly when considering mental health. Yoga has been shown to improve executive function, planning, and control abilities [16]. People who practice yoga are also shown to have greater emotional moderation due to increased attention resources [17].…”
Section: Body Mind Spirit Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specific exercise can be performed with electronic devices at home or gym, which is costly. Furthermore, studies comparing the effects of yoga and exercise seem to indicate that, in both healthy and disease population, yoga may be as effective or better than exercise at improving a variety of health-related outcome measures such as heart rate variability (HRV; Bowman et al 1997), cognitive performance (Gothe et al 2013), blood glucose (Gordon et al 2008;Singh et al 2008), blood lipids (Singh et al 2008), salivary cortisol (Smith et al 2011), and oxidative stress (Sinha et al 2007). Except all these, yoga is helpful for improving subjective measures of fatigue (Oken et al 2004(Oken et al , 2006, pain, and sleep in healthy and ill population (Yurkuran et al 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, the beneficial effects of acute exercise seem to be disproportionately influential on executive control processes (i.e., planning, coordination, inhibition, mental flexibility, working memory) relative to tasks of recall and alertness (Chang et al, 2012;McMorris & Hale, 2012), and this is often measured using computerized neurocognitive tasks (McMorris & Hale, 2012). For example, the modified-flanker task represents a computerized neurocognitive measure of executive control that has been highly sensitive for capturing acute effects of exercise on cognition in healthy (Gothe, Pontifex, Hillman, & McAuley, 2013;Hillman et al, 2009;Pontifex & Hillman, 2007) and cognitively impaired populations (e.g., Pontifex, Saliba, Raine, Picchietti, & Hillman, 2013). The modifiedflanker task requires participants to rapidly inhibit task-irrelevant information in the stimulus environment in order to correctly respond to a centrally presented target stimulus amid either congruent or incongruent flanking stimuli (Eriksen & Eriksen, 1974).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%