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Physical activity intervention improves executive function and language development during early childhood: The active early learning cluster randomized controlled trial.

Lisa S OliveRohan M TelfordElizabeth M WestruppRichard D Telford
Published in: Child development (2023)
This study aimed to determine the effects of the Active Early Learning (AEL) childcare center-based physical activity intervention on early childhood executive function and expressive vocabulary via a randomized controlled trial. Three-hundred-and-fourteen preschool children (134 girls) aged 3-5 years from 15 childcare centers were randomly assigned to the intervention (8 centers; n = 170 children) or control group (7 centers, n = 144 children) in May 2019. Participants were mostly Australian (85%) and from slightly higher areas of socio-economic status than the Australian average. There was an AEL intervention effect on inhibition (β = 0.5, p = .033, d = 0.29) and expressive vocabulary (β = 1.97, p = .001, d = 0.24). Integration of the AEL physical activity intervention into the daily childcare routine was effective in enhancing children's executive function and expressive language development.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • randomized controlled trial
  • young adults
  • body mass index
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • study protocol
  • clinical trial