Olympic team rowers and team swimmers show altered functional brain activation during working memory and action inhibition

Background High-level expertise in team-sports is associated with superior performance on executive functions (EFs) such as working memory (WM) and action inhibition, and with altered activation of brain areas related to these EFs. In most such studies, athletes were sampled from the domain of dynamic (i.e., open-skill) team-sports (e.g., soccer players). Whether static (i.e., closed-skill) team-sports athletes (e.g., rowers and synchronized swimmers) also show superior EFs performance and differential EF-related functional brain activation remains unknown. Methods We recruited 14 elite closed-skill athletes, all national champions, and internationally competitive in various rowing disciplines, as well as 14 controls matched on gender, age, and education, and had them perform working memory and action inhibition (stop-signal) tasks during fMRI scanning. Results Group differences in performance in either task failed to obtain statistical significance, although athletes showed a numerical trend toward higher WM capacity than controls. Importantly, task-related BOLD responses suggested that Olympic closed-skill team athletes show stronger recruitment of brain areas that emphasize relatively stable task demands and weaker engagement of brain areas that emphasize rapidly changing demands imposed by extraneous Conclusion Functional brain imaging data suggest elite closed-skill athletes may employ different cognitive strategies.
© Copyright 2024 Neuropsychologia. Elsevier. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:endurance sports
Published in:Neuropsychologia
Language:English
Published: 2024
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2024.108974
Volume:203
Pages:108974
Document types:article
Level:advanced