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September 2, 2025
Background:
Children with ADHD often experience deficits in cognitive processes called executive functions. One of the main executive functions is working memory, which is crucial for learning and problem-solving. Issues related to working memory can impact not just academic performance, but also self-esteem, social interactions, and future career prospects. Daily challenges can include completing homework, remembering tasks, and maintaining focus in class, further complicating the learning and social experiences of those with ADHD.
Physical activity boosts blood flow to the brain. It also assists neural plasticity, meaning it enables networks of nerve cells to reorganize their connections and grow new connections. That helps improve physical skills and potentially academic performance. It is an engaging, easy-to-implement intervention that effectively and sustainably increases children’s participation, overcoming many limitations of other methods.
Study:
A Chinese study team set out to perform a systematic search of the published peer-reviewed medical literature to conduct a meta-analysis focusing specifically on the efficacy of physical activity for boosting working memory.
The inclusion criteria were fourfold. Studies had to:
Eleven studies with a combined total of 588 participants met the inclusion criteria. Five were rated high quality. None were rated low quality.
Results:
Meta-analysis of these eleven studies yielded a medium effect size improvement in working memory. Variability in study outcomes was acceptable (low heterogeneity). There was no indication of publication bias.
Combined cognitive and aerobic interventions were associated with more than double the effect size of simple aerobic interventions, reaching large effect size (4 studies, 233 participants).
Subgroup analysis favored a happy medium, suggesting there are points beyond which more is not better:
Take-Away:
Because this work focuses on working memory, not the symptoms of ADHD, one cannot conclude that physical activity could replace current therapies for ADHD. It does, however, provide strong evidence that physical activity interventions can meaningfully improve working memory in children with ADHD. The most consistent benefits were seen with structured programs of moderate duration and frequency. As with previous studies, the results seem to suggest that interventions excessively long in duration may have diminishing results, highlighting the importance of optimizing session length, frequency, and total intervention time. Before recommending very specific exercises and durations, however, further study is still needed. Future research should refine protocols and explore mechanisms that maximize effectiveness.
Gong Cheng, Ce Song, and XiaoQin Hong, “The impact of physical activity on working memory in children with ADHD: a meta-analysis,” Frontiers in Psychiatry (2025), 16:1578614, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1578614.