Mapping Interindividual Variation in the Aging Connectome Study Results: Examining Fitness and Executive Control
Stan Colcombe, Anna MacKay-Brandt

TL;DR
This study shows that cardiovascular fitness is stable in middle to late adulthood and predicts future cognitive improvements.
Contribution
The study reveals that baseline cardiovascular fitness predicts later cognitive gains and highlights its role as a biomarker of brain plasticity.
Findings
Cardiovascular fitness (VO2) is highly stable over time in mid- to late adulthood.
Higher baseline VO2max predicts greater cognitive practice effects in executive control tasks.
The stability of VO2 suggests individual set points and the need for accurate assessment in exercise studies.
Abstract
Translational geroscience seeks to identify modifiable factors that can slow or prevent age-related functional decline. Cardiovascular fitness (CF) is one such factor, with intervention studies showing that fitness improvements enhance brain plasticity and executive control. However, little is known about normative variation in CF across mid- to late adulthood or how it predicts cognitive change under naturalistic conditions. We examined data from Mapping Interindividual Variation in the Aging Connectome, a community-ascertained sample aged 40–74 years. Participants completed annual assessments of CF (VO2submax) and executive control (Attention Network Task [ANT] conflict effect) over three years. Among individuals with three assessments (n = 155) fitness was highly stable, ICC(2,1) = 0.83. Such high absolute agreement over time was contrary to our expectation of intraindividual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury Research · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery
