Effects on cognitive function and mood state due to interventions involving finger movements in healthy older adults
Atsuko Hayashi, Momoka Ijima, Keitaro Ito, Sinan Chen, Masahide Nakamura

TL;DR
This study explores how finger exercises affect cognitive function and mood in older adults, finding potential benefits for attention and memory.
Contribution
The study introduces finger movement interventions as a novel approach to improve cognitive functions in healthy older adults.
Findings
Group A showed significant improvement in TMT-A/B times after the intervention.
Group B significantly reduced TMT-B completion time.
All groups experienced increased arousal and decreased mood stability.
Abstract
Previous studies have reported relationships between hand dexterity and cognitive functions. However, there are few studies examining effects of finger exercise interventions on cognitive functions. Here we administered working memory(WM) tasks involving finger movements as interventions in healthy older subjects and investigated changes in cognitive functions and mood state due to the interventions. The participants were 71 healthy older people in total (a cross-over study). They were randomly assigned to the following three intervention groups; Group A performed a WM task using numbers and Japanese kana characters accompanied by finger movements; Group B performed finger movements in accordance with the presented numbers or kana; Group C were allocated to the WM task without finger movements. Cognitive functions [Trail Making Test(TMT)-A/B, Digit/Tapping Span] and mood states (the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMotor Control and Adaptation · Hemispheric Asymmetry in Neuroscience · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
