This study found that, in hot conditions, the combination of crushed ice (precooling) with head cooling (percooling) significantly improved S7 performance, meanwhile, single cooling method with HC maintained S7 over the duration of exercise compared to baseline respectively. Additionally, OSPAN scores in both cooling trials (MIX and HC) showed a tendency to be maintained over the same time compared to CON. Further, S7 and OSPAN scores were significantly impaired over time without a cooling intervention. The impairment recorded for working memory over time in the CON trial was most likely due to rising Tc and Th as a result of exercise in the heat. Prolonged exercise in hot conditions will continuously store and accumulate heat in the body, which can disrupt the thermal equilibrium and diminish heat removal from the brain and body (Nybo et al., 2002). Previous studies have reported that a Tc ≥38.5°C has been found to be the onset of decrement on cognitive performance (Hocking et al., 2001; Schmit et al., 2017). Specifically, Hocking et al. (2001) reported that cognitive performances (Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, Digit Span and Inspection Time tasks) deteriorated when Tc increased above 38.5°C (peak: ~38.9°C) during exercise (walking at 5 km·h-1, incline 8-12%, for 40 min) in hot conditions (35°C, 65% RH) compared to a thermoneutral condition (25°C, 65% RH). In this study, forehead temperature was not measured. In the current study, working memory (S7 and OSPAN) was impaired in CON at a lower Tc ranging between 37.89°C and 38.30°C that occurred during the last five minutes of bout 1 of exercise. These values equated to a Th of 37.06 ± 0.51°C and 37.35 ± 0.51°C at the 25 and 30 min mark of bout 1 for CON. Conversely, S7 scores improved over time in both cooling trials compared to CON and baseline scores, despite Tc values peaking at 39.16 ± 0.33°C (MIX) and 39.58 ± 0.30°C (HC) at the end of the exercise protocol. Additionally, S7 scores were also significantly higher in MIX compared to HC at the end of bout 2 of exercise, with Tc being significantly lower in the MIX trial at this time point. While increasing Tc values may have played some role in impairing S7 performance in HC at the end of bout 2 compared to MIX, the question arises as to why performance was significantly improved in the cooling trials compared to CON (and baseline) despite peak Tc values being greater than 38.5°C. It is possible that the most important factor in respect to S7 performance during exercise in the heat relates to Th, with this variable found to be lower in both cooling trials compared to CON at the end of both bouts of exercise, with peak Th values being 37.30 ± 0.47°C (MIX) and 37.51 ± 0.36°C (HC) compared to 38.54 ± 0.44°C (CON). This observation appears to also apply to OSPAN performance, where the tendency for better performance in both MIX and HC compared to CON, was associated with lower Th values at the end of both bouts of exercise compared to CON, while Tc was significantly lower in the MIX trial only (bout 1, 37.89 ± 0.35°C; and bout 2, 39.16 ± 0.33°C) when compared to CON. The higher Th values found for CON trial at the 25-30 min mark of bouts 1 and 2 compared to HC and MIX, may explain the impairment found in OSPAN scores for this trial compared to the cooling trials. These results suggest that factors associated with Th may play a role in working memory performance during and after exercise in the heat. These results are consistent with Gaoua et al. (2011) who reported improved working memory (spatial span test) performance in the heat following head cooling with ice packs compared to no-cooling, where Th was lower in the cooling trial (Th peak: ~38°C for cooling versus ~39.5°C for no-cooling). Another consideration is that TS for MIX and HC was significantly lower than CON during the last 5 min of each bout of exercise, with RPE also being lower in either one or both cooling trials following both bouts of exercise compared to CON. Previous research reported significantly lower TS, along with Tc and Th, during 60 min of steady-state cycling (55% V̇O2peak) in the heat, compared to a control following crushed ice ingestion (Saldaris et al., 2019). In the current study, this reduction in TS could be related to the wearing of the cooling cap during exercise in the heat. Notably, the increased sensation of coolness following head cooling during exercise could mask the true state of the body (Tyler and Sunderland, 2011) even with Tc rising above 39°C by the end of the exercise protocol. This lower TS may have contributed to the improvement in cognitive performance, particularly during the final stages of exercise, despite Tc being ≥38.5°C; the critical value associated with cognitive fatigue. In the current study, the combination of cooling removed heat from the body in several possible ways. Firstly, ice ingestion creates a heat sink in the body when ice is changed from a solid to liquid, with this process absorbing heat from the body (Seigel and Laursen, 2012). In the current study, this most likely led to significantly lower pre-exercise Tc and Th in MIX. Further, the significant reduction in Th seen at the start of exercise in MIX may have been due to the convective cooling of carotid blood inflow to the brain associated with swallowing crushed ice (Saldaris et al., 2019; Seigel and Laursen, 2012). Saldaris et al. (2020) reported lower Tc and Th following crushed ice in the heat compared to a control condition and found that precooling enabled participants to maintain decision making and working memory during exercise. Further, head-cooling during exercise most likely removed heat away from the head region (skin, skull and brain) through conductive cooling. This process was found to lower Th following cooling in MIX and HC compared to CON. While head-cooling may have lowered Th, it did not reduce Tc due to similar Tc values recorded between the HC and CON trials over the course of the protocol. Further, the effect of head-cooling on MIX is speculative as there was no trial that assessed the effects of precooling with ice ingestion alone. In the current study, despite the changes in Tc and Th associated with MIX, Tsk was not impacted, with results for this variable being similar between trials. Lack of change in Tsk between trials suggests that Tsk values that increase from ~34.7°C to 38.32°C have no obvious impact on S7 and OSPAN performance. This finding is supported by Simmons et al. (2008) who reported that Tsk was unlikely to influence/alter cognitive performance. In this study, although S7 and OSPAN assessed complex cognitive tasks for working memory, the results differed from one another. The difference in the complexity level of each task (Hancock and Vasmatzidis, 2003) and the timing of the S7, which was completed whilst wearing the cooling cap (with participants feeling cooler as shown by TS scores), could be relevant factors. Further, the complexity of the OSPAN task required administration post rather than during exercise. As such, the impact of the cooling manipulation may have been stronger for the S7 task. Also, S7 is a single-verbal task and may provide a less specific but more sensitive measure, whereas OSPAN is a computer-based multifactorial task. |