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Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education

Two studies were conducted to examine the acute effects of exergaming on students’ executive functions and to explore their situational interest regarding these games in elementary physical education. The first study involved a two-group, repeated measures, cross-over quasi-experimental design. Part...

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Autores principales: Kolovelonis, Athanasios, Papastergiou, Marina, Samara, Evdoxia, Goudas, Marios
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9914954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36767269
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031902
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author Kolovelonis, Athanasios
Papastergiou, Marina
Samara, Evdoxia
Goudas, Marios
author_facet Kolovelonis, Athanasios
Papastergiou, Marina
Samara, Evdoxia
Goudas, Marios
author_sort Kolovelonis, Athanasios
collection PubMed
description Two studies were conducted to examine the acute effects of exergaming on students’ executive functions and to explore their situational interest regarding these games in elementary physical education. The first study involved a two-group, repeated measures, cross-over quasi-experimental design. Participants were 74 (36 boys) fourth- and fifth-grade students who were assigned to the experimental (38 students) and the waiting list control (36 students) group. The single physical education session with exergames was first implemented with the initial experimental group and after the post-test, the waiting list control group received the intervention. In the second study, a pre-test post-test, within-subjects design was involved with the experimental group students (48 fourth- and fifth-grade students, 27 boys) who participated in a booster single physical education session with exergames two months after their involvement in a four-week intervention with cognitively challenging physical activity games. Both studies involved pre- and post-intervention measures for executive functions using the design fluency test and a post-test measure for situational interest. During the acute session, students had to follow the movements of an on-screen dancing character in time to a chosen song of the Just Dance 2015 exergame. The results of the first study showed that experimental group students improved significantly from pre- to post-test their scores in design fluency and in cognitive flexibility and in the total score of the design fluency test and their improvements were higher compared to the waiting list control group. The waiting list control group students, after receiving the acute session with exergames, significantly improved their scores in design fluency, inhibition, and cognitive flexibility and in the total score of the design fluency test compared to their pre-intervention scores. Moreover, the second study showed that students’ total score in the design fluency test improved significantly from pre- to post-intervention. In both studies, students reported generally high scores in all subscales of the situational interest questionnaire. These results suggested that an acute exergame-based physical education session attracted students’ interest and positively triggered their executive functions.
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spelling pubmed-99149542023-02-11 Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education Kolovelonis, Athanasios Papastergiou, Marina Samara, Evdoxia Goudas, Marios Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Two studies were conducted to examine the acute effects of exergaming on students’ executive functions and to explore their situational interest regarding these games in elementary physical education. The first study involved a two-group, repeated measures, cross-over quasi-experimental design. Participants were 74 (36 boys) fourth- and fifth-grade students who were assigned to the experimental (38 students) and the waiting list control (36 students) group. The single physical education session with exergames was first implemented with the initial experimental group and after the post-test, the waiting list control group received the intervention. In the second study, a pre-test post-test, within-subjects design was involved with the experimental group students (48 fourth- and fifth-grade students, 27 boys) who participated in a booster single physical education session with exergames two months after their involvement in a four-week intervention with cognitively challenging physical activity games. Both studies involved pre- and post-intervention measures for executive functions using the design fluency test and a post-test measure for situational interest. During the acute session, students had to follow the movements of an on-screen dancing character in time to a chosen song of the Just Dance 2015 exergame. The results of the first study showed that experimental group students improved significantly from pre- to post-test their scores in design fluency and in cognitive flexibility and in the total score of the design fluency test and their improvements were higher compared to the waiting list control group. The waiting list control group students, after receiving the acute session with exergames, significantly improved their scores in design fluency, inhibition, and cognitive flexibility and in the total score of the design fluency test compared to their pre-intervention scores. Moreover, the second study showed that students’ total score in the design fluency test improved significantly from pre- to post-intervention. In both studies, students reported generally high scores in all subscales of the situational interest questionnaire. These results suggested that an acute exergame-based physical education session attracted students’ interest and positively triggered their executive functions. MDPI 2023-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9914954/ /pubmed/36767269 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031902 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kolovelonis, Athanasios
Papastergiou, Marina
Samara, Evdoxia
Goudas, Marios
Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education
title Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education
title_full Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education
title_fullStr Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education
title_full_unstemmed Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education
title_short Acute Effects of Exergaming on Students’ Executive Functions and Situational Interest in Elementary Physical Education
title_sort acute effects of exergaming on students’ executive functions and situational interest in elementary physical education
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9914954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36767269
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031902
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