What is it about?

The objective of the present study was to investigate the body-cognitive relationship through behavioral and electrophysiological measures in an attempt to uncover the underlying mediating neuronal mechanism for movement-induced cognitive change. To this end we examined the effects of Quadrato Motor Training (QMT), a new whole-body training paradigm on cognitive performance, including creativity and reaction time tasks, and electrophysiological change, using a within-subject pre-post design. Creativity was studied by means of the Alternate Uses Task, measuring ideational fluency and ideational flexibility. Electrophysiological effects were measured in terms of alpha power and coherence. In order to determine whether training-induced changes were driven by the cognitive or the motor aspects of the training, we used two control groups: Verbal Training (VT, identical cognitive training with verbal response) and Simple Motor Training (SMT, similar motor training with reduced choice requirements). Twenty-seven participants were randomly assigned to one of the groups. Following QMT, we found enhanced inter-hemispheric and intra-hemispheric alpha coherence, and increased ideational flexibility, which was not the case for either the SMT or VT groups. These findings indicate that it is the combination of the motor and cognitive aspects embedded in the QMT which is important for increasing ideational flexibility and alpha coherence.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

See also: Dotan Ben-Soussan, T., Glicksohn, J., Berkovich Ohana, A., Donchin, O., & Goldstein, A. (2011). Step in time: Changes in EEG coherence during a time estimation task following Quadrato motor training. In D. Algom, D. Zakay, E. Chajut, S. Shaki, Y. Mama & V. Shakuf (Eds.), Fechner Day 2011: Proceedings of the 27th Annual Meeting of the International Society for Psychophysics (pp. 239-244). Raanana, Israel: International Society for Psychophysics.

Perspectives

The first paper stemming from Tal's doctorate, making the claim that meditation-in-motion (Quadrato Motor Training, QMT) can lead to greater flexibility (creativity) and to higher alpha coherence.

Professor Joseph Glicksohn
Bar-Ilan University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Into the Square and out of the Box: The effects of Quadrato Motor Training on Creativity and Alpha Coherence, PLoS ONE, January 2013, PLOS,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0055023.
You can read the full text:

Read
Open access logo

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page