Is Cardiopulmonary Fitness Related to Attention, Concentration, and Academic Performance in Different Subjects in Schoolchildren?
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rico-González, Markel; Martín Moya, Ricardo; Carlos Vivas, Jorge; Giles Girela, Francisco Javier; Ardigò, Luca Paolo; González-Fernández, Francisco TomásEditorial
MDPI
Materia
sport Exercise correlation
Fecha
2025-07-16Referencia bibliográfica
Rico-González, M.; Martín-Moya, R.; Carlos-Vivas, J.; Giles-Girela, F.J.; Ardigò, L.P.; González-Fernández, F.T. Is Cardiopulmonary Fitness Related to Attention, Concentration, and Academic Performance in Different Subjects in Schoolchildren? J. Funct. Morphol. Kinesiol. 2025, 10, 272. https://doi.org/10.3390/jfmk10030272
Resumen
Background: The perceived importance of physical practice and its contribution to students’ academic success have evolved considerably throughout the history of the modern
educational system. Aim: The purpose of this study was to understand the relationship
between physical fitness (measured as VO2max) and cognitive abilities (attention and
concentration) and academic performance in different subjects: sciences, letters, language,
arts, and physical education. Method: Fifty Spanish male students who participated in
extracurricular sports activities (mean age (SD): 11.59 ± 1.30; range: 9–15 years) were
included in the analysis. The 6 min walk test was used to assess physical fitness (6MWT),
while for selective attention and concentration, the students completed the D2 test, which is
usually considered to analyse the visual ability to select the most relevant stimulus of an exercise and ignore precisely the most irrelevant stimuli. Results: Correlation the individual
contribution analyses revealed no significant associations between VO2max and academic
performance in sciences (r = 0.04, p = 0.77), humanities (r = 0.00, p = 0.98), language (r = 0.03,
p = 0.83), or arts (r = 0.04, p = 0.76). Similarly, no relationship was found between VO2max
and overall academic performance (r = 0.10, p = 0.46), or cognitive abilities. However, a
small positive correlation was observed between VO2max and physical education scores.
Conclusions: Physical fitness showed no significant association with cognitive abilities or
academic performance in most subjects, although a small positive correlation with physical
education scores was observed. These findings emphasise the importance of promoting
physical activity for its health and physical benefits. However, future research should
explore broader cognitive outcomes and include more diverse and representative samples.





