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Not All Sitting Is Equal in Later Life: A Perspective on Cognitively Active Sedentary Behavior

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  • André Ramalho

    (Department of Sports and Well Being, Polytechnic Institute of Castelo Branco, 6000-084 Castelo Branco, Portugal
    SPRINT Sport Physical Activity and Health Research & Innovation Center, 6000-084 Castelo Branco, Portugal)

  • Emmanuel Fernandes

    (Centre Amiénois de Recherche en Éducation et Formation, Université de Picardie Jules Verne, 80080 Amiens, France)

  • Pedro Duarte-Mendes

    (Department of Sports and Well Being, Polytechnic Institute of Castelo Branco, 6000-084 Castelo Branco, Portugal
    SPRINT Sport Physical Activity and Health Research & Innovation Center, 6000-084 Castelo Branco, Portugal)

  • Rui Miguel Duarte Paulo

    (Department of Sports and Well Being, Polytechnic Institute of Castelo Branco, 6000-084 Castelo Branco, Portugal
    SPRINT Sport Physical Activity and Health Research & Innovation Center, 6000-084 Castelo Branco, Portugal)

Abstract

Sedentary behavior is conventionally defined as waking time spent sitting, reclining, or lying at very low energy expenditure (≤1.5 METs), a definition that supports surveillance and guideline translation. For cognitive and mental-health outcomes in later life, however, total sedentary minutes may be too coarse: seated episodes differ in cognitive demand, social context, autonomy over pacing, and stopping cues. This perspective advances a falsifiable thesis: distinguishing cognitively active from cognitively passive sedentary domains should yield more coherent and interpretable associations with cognition and mental health than total sedentary time alone. Existing evidence suggests that passive, media-dominant patterns and cognitively engaging seated practices relate differently to cognitive decline, dementia risk, and depression-related outcomes, although confounding and reverse causality remain central concerns. We propose a minimal measurement agenda: domain reporting, key modifiers, reliability flags for mixed episodes, episode-linked ecological momentary assessment, and time-reallocation contrasts. If domain resolution does not improve stability, coherence, or substitution-based interpretability, the thesis should be rejected or revised.

Suggested Citation

  • André Ramalho & Emmanuel Fernandes & Pedro Duarte-Mendes & Rui Miguel Duarte Paulo, 2026. "Not All Sitting Is Equal in Later Life: A Perspective on Cognitively Active Sedentary Behavior," Societies, MDPI, vol. 16(7), pages 1-16, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsoctx:v:16:y:2026:i:7:p:199-:d:1973264
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