Associations of Physical Activity and Sedentary Time From Childhood to Adolescence With Cognition in Adolescence: The PANIC Study

June 1, 2026

Authors: Petri Jalanko, Marja H Leppänen, Bert Bond, Jari A Laukkanen, Timo A Lakka, Eero A Haapala

Journal: Pediatric Exercise Science

DOI: 10.1123/pes.2025-0083

Year Published: 2026

Purpose:

Investigate the associations of cumulative exposure to physical activity (PA), sedentary time (ST), and screen time from childhood to adolescence over an 8-year follow-up with cognition in adolescence.

Methods:

All together, 260 adolescents (136 boys) who were 15-17 y at 8-y follow-up were analyzed. PA and ST were assessed using an Actiheart device, and different types of PA, nonscreen-based ST, and screen time were assessed by a questionnaire at baseline, 2-y and 8-y examinations. Cognition was assessed using CogState tests at 8-year examinations.

Results:

Self-reported cumulative unsupervised PA from childhood to adolescence was inversely associated with accuracy in working memory task (standardized regression coefficient, β = -0.127; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.247 to -0.008) in adolescence. Self-reported nonscreen-based ST was inversely associated with reaction time (β = -0.176; 95% CI, -0.299 to -0.053) and accuracy (β = -0.149; 95% CI, -0.274 to -0.024) in working memory tasks. Self-reported screen time was inversely associated with reaction time (β = -0.194; 95% CI, -0.316 to -0.071) and accuracy (β = -0.233; 95% CI, -0.355 to -0.112) in both working memory tasks and directly associated with overall cognition (β = 0.187; 95% CI, 0.070 to 0.305).

Conclusion:

Accumulating less unsupervised PA and more screen time from childhood to adolescence was associated with better cognition in adolescence.

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