Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common neurodevelopmental disorders of childhood and is characterized by inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity, as well as weaknesses in executive functions such as inhibition, working memory, and cognitive flexibility. Medication remains the main treatment, but some children respond poorly, experience side effects, and struggle with long-term compliance. Although exercise has emerged as a promising nonpharmacological option, most programs focus on aerobic exercise and pay less attention to the motor and cognitive challenges that many children with ADHD face together. Based on these challenges, deeper research is needed into motor approaches that train cognition and movement simultaneously.
On February 11, 2026, researchers from Beijing Normal University, Beijing Sport University, Xuzhou Rehabilitation Hospital Affiliated to Xuzhou Medical University, and Peking University Sixth Hospital, World Pediatric Journal We show that a 12-week integrated cognitive-motor exercise program reduced core ADHD symptoms in children and produced stronger improvements in inhibitory control and immediate working memory than aerobic exercise alone, indicating a promising non-pharmacological strategy for more comprehensive ADHD management.
This multicenter trial enrolled 107 children with ADHD, ages 6 to 10, who were assigned to one of three groups for 12 weeks: integrated cognitive motor exercise, aerobic exercise, or waitlist control. Both exercise groups trained in 45-minute sessions three times per week. The integrated program combined motor, object control, balance, and fine motor tasks with built-in challenges that target inhibition, working memory, and cognitive flexibility, such as stop-go signals, reverse commands, multistep movement sequences, and rule switching. The aerobic group completed moderate-intensity treadmill or cycling sessions that were matched in frequency and duration. The researchers assessed ADHD symptoms with the SNAP-IV scale and measured executive function using the Stroop test, Rey-Osterries complex value test, and trail-making test. Both exercise groups significantly reduced inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity compared to the control group. However, the integrated program showed significantly greater reductions in Stroop color word interference time than the aerobic and control groups, and also outperformed both groups in immediate working memory. The exercise group improved cognitive flexibility, but no adverse events were reported.
This study suggests that not all exercise is equally effective for children with ADHD. By combining movement with tasks that require remembering rules, stopping reactions, and quickly adapting, training may more directly strengthen the mental systems that support self-control. The researchers believe that this “cognitively demanding” form may help explain why integrated cognitive-motor exercise provided additional benefits over standard aerobic exercise, particularly in inhibitory control and immediate memory, which are central to daily life at school and at home.
These findings present a practical model that can be applied to schools, clinics, and community programs. Rather than relying on movement as a general energy outlet, educators and therapists may be able to design structured play that intentionally trains attention, memory, and behavioral control during movement. This intervention is safe, feasible, and well-received by parents and may serve as a valuable adjunct to pharmacotherapy or as an alternative for families seeking non-drug support. This study also opens the door to future research into long-term outcomes and brain-based mechanisms, such as how integrated exercise reshapes neural circuits involved in attention and executive control.
sauce:
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Reference magazines:
Chew, FL; Others. (2026). Integrated cognitive motor exercise on core symptoms and executive function in children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: A randomized clinical trial. World Journal of Pediatrics. DOI: 10.1007/s12519-026-01019-4https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12519-026-01019-4

