TY - BOOK ID - 134062874 TI - Brain Function and Health, Sports, and Exercise AU - Clemente, Filipe Manuel AU - Silva, Ana Filipa PY - 2022 PB - Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute DB - UniCat KW - Lifestyle, sport & leisure KW - aerobic exercise KW - creativity KW - convergent thinking KW - divergent thinking KW - flexibility KW - insight problem-solving KW - cognitive functions KW - mood KW - vigor KW - pleasure KW - open-skill exercises KW - closed-skill exercises KW - cognition KW - older adults KW - physical activity KW - sleep KW - inhibitory performance KW - mediating effects KW - exercise KW - attention KW - attentional bias KW - arousal KW - randomized controlled trials KW - non-randomized controlled trials KW - cross-over studies KW - systematic review KW - meta-analysis KW - video exercises KW - attitudes KW - online platform KW - Brain Breaks® KW - handgrip strength KW - hypertension KW - China KW - international physical activity questionnaires KW - alternate uses test KW - antisaccade KW - oculomotor KW - task-evoked pupil dilation KW - vision KW - diffusion tensor imaging KW - fractional anisotropy KW - inhibitory control KW - aerobic fitness KW - early adulthood KW - long-rope jumping KW - 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol KW - 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid KW - soccer KW - sports KW - depressive symptoms KW - mental health KW - brain KW - exercise intensity KW - executive function KW - motor expertise KW - balance KW - spatial cognition KW - high altitude KW - cardiorespiratory fitness KW - stress KW - amygdala KW - hippocampus KW - physical exercise KW - cognitive exercise KW - simultaneous training KW - healthy aging KW - cerebral oxygenation UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:134062874 AB - This reprint represents the articles published in the Special Issue “Brain Function and Health, Sports, and Exercise”. Fifteen articles were published, with topics covering the relationship between acute effects of exercise on cognitive function, as well as the influence of exercise on positive medium-term adaptations in populations as children, youth, adults and older. We think that the different approaches used in the different articles will help the readers to have a greater overview of the current research in brain and exercise. ER -