A single bout of aerobic exercise modulates motor learning performance and cortical excitability in humans |
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Affiliation: | 1. School and graduate institute of physical therapy, National Taiwan University, No.17, Xu-Zhou Road, 10055 Taipei, Taiwan;2. Department of rehabilitation, No 7, National Taiwan University Hospital, Zhongshan S Rd, 10055 Taipei, Taiwan;3. Department of Psychiatry, National Taiwan University Hospital, No7, Zhongshan S Road, 10055 Taipei, Taiwan;4. Dept. Psychology and Neurosciences, Leibniz Research Center for Working Environment and Human Factors, Ardeystrasse 67, 44139 Dortmund, Germany;5. Department of Neurology, University Medical Hospital Bergmannsheil, Bochum, Germany |
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Abstract: | BackgroundEvidence indicates beneficial effects of aerobic exercise on motor learning performance, which might be caused by the impact of aerobic exercise on cortical excitability. It is thus suggested that physiological effects of aerobic exercise on cortical excitability determine the effects of aerobic exercise on motor learning. Nevertheless, respective results usually come from independent studies, and a prove of the causal relationship between neurophysiological and motor learning effects is still missing. This study aims to explore the impact of a single bout of aerobic exercise on brain physiology and motor learning, and the association between these phenomena in humansMethodThe study was conducted in a cross-over design. In twenty healthy subjects, cortical excitability and motor learning were assessed before and after a single bout of aerobic exercise or a control interventionResultsThe results show that aerobic exercise improved motor sequence learning and enhanced cortical excitability in humans. Furthermore, a correlation between the exercise-dependent alteration of cortical excitability (short intracortical inhibition, which is determined primarily by the GABAergic system) and improvement of motor learning has been foundDiscussionThe study found motor learning performance-improving effects of aerobic exercise, and these results might be explained by an exercised-caused alteration of cortical excitability, especially a reduction of GABA activity. |
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