Physical exercise and brain network dynamics: reduction of frontoparietal-striatal connectivity following 1 hour of aerobic cycling
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Physical exercise is beneficial for metabolic health and cognitive performance. In addition, exercise can be highly pleasurable and and serves as an effective stress reliever. Extant studies have highlighted frontal, parietal, and subcortical brain changes following acute bouts of exercise. However, slower, slightly delayed brain correlates after exercise at the network level have not been studied. Therefore, this study’s objective was to investigate the changes in dynamic functional connectivity after 60 minutes of exercise in healthy males.
Here we measured a 6-minute resting state fMRI in 24 young males at baseline and after a 60-minute cycling exercise challenge. Apart from routine preprocessing, the data were denoised with FSL-FIX and modeled with i) leading eigenvector dynamics analysis (LEiDA) to probe whole brain network dynamics and ii) with group independent component analysis (ICA) and dual regression to quantify static brain connectivity. The within subject statistical tests compared baseline to post-exercise conditions.
We found that a striato-fronto-parietal network is destabilized after exercise, as indicated by a lower probability of occurrence in dynamic analysis through LEiDA. The brain areas in the network include the bilateral caudate, putamen and pallidum as well as middle orbitofrontal, frontal operculum, frontal trigonum and inferior parietal cortices. No differences between baseline and post exercise conditions were found in the dual regression of the group ICA components.
We conclude that 60 minutes of cycling causes a prolonged effect in brain network dynamics, reducing synchronization between the striatum and frontoparietal networks with respect to baseline. This provides insights into the network-level neural correlates of aerobic exercise, which may be directly linked with the stress relieving effects of physical exercise.