reviewMedicine & Science in Sports & ExerciseMay 17, 2016GREEN OA

Physical Activity, Fitness, Cognitive Function, and Academic Achievement in Children

Apple (Israel) · International Organization for Migration

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

The relationship among physical activity (PA), fitness, cognitive function, and academic achievement in children is receiving considerable attention. The utility of PA to improve cognition and academic achievement is promising but uncertain; thus, this position stand will provide clarity from the available science.

Objective

The purpose of this study was to answer the following questions: 1) among children age 5-13 yr, do PA and physical fitness influence cognition, learning, brain structure, and brain function? 2) Among children age 5-13 yr, do PA, physical education (PE), and sports programs influence standardized achievement test performance and concentration/attention? STUDY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: This study used primary source articles published in English in peer-reviewed journals. Articles that presented data on, PA, fitness, or PE/sport participation and cognition, learning, brain function/structure, academic achievement, or concentration/attention were included. DATA SOURCES: Two separate searches were performed to identify studies that focused on 1) cognition, learning, brain structure, and brain function and 2) standardized achievement test performance and concentration/attention. PubMed, ERIC, PsychInfo, SportDiscus, Scopus, Web of Science, Academic Search Premier, and Embase were searched (January 1990-September 2014) for studies that met inclusion criteria. Sixty-four studies met inclusion criteria for the first search (cognition/learning/brain), and 73 studies met inclusion criteria for the second search (academic achievement/concentration). STUDY APPRAISAL AND SYNTHESIS METHODS: Articles were grouped by study design as cross-sectional, longitudinal, acute, or intervention trials. Considerable heterogeneity existed for several important study parameters; therefore, results were synthesized and presented by study design.

Citation impact

1,801
total citations
FWCI
179.44
Percentile
100%
References
182
Citations per year

Authors

8

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cognition
  • Psychology
  • Academic achievement
  • Physical fitness
  • Developmental psychology
  • Function (biology)
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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