There has been a lot of research showing what improves our
brain (lecitine, ginkgo biloba,
working memory practices, etc.). In search for another factors, an interesting study conducted at University of California, Irvine examined the role of exercise in the brain power. It seems that
exercise is a very effective tool in improving the performance of your
brain, and more so than thinking itself (One could always think of the Greek
concept of kalokagatia- equlibrium between body and mind).
In the research by Berchtold et al. (2005), they looked at how lab animals brains response to various degrees of busy, or
enriched environments- environments either furnished with toys and running
wheels OR environments devoid of any of
those. It was shown that leaning of very
specific cognitive tasks (e.g., navigation) is domain specific, not
allowing newly acquired brain network to respond to any other stimuli than
those of the navigation task. This is NOT the case for exercise. When the mice
ran, many other neural networks were activated- creating agile neurons later
responding to various kinds of tasks. Thus, exercise lead to neurogenesis through
the release of so called B.D.N.F. (brain-derived neurotropic factor).
Research of Arthur F. Kramer examined effects of exercise on elderly brain examining one-year
walking versus stretching. One area of
the brain where neurogenesis occurs is hippocampus, a center involved in memory
consolidation and storage. The volume of hippocampus after one year of exercise
has increased for the walkers, but stretchers´s volume returned to normal
atrophy. Walkers also showed improvement
in cognitive abilities and higher level of B.D.N.F in their blood
stream.
Hippocampal size
seems to be an indicator of many things, see also our post on Deja Vu.
Nice :-) Kalokagatia for the win!
ReplyDeleteIs there really confidence in the effects of ginkgo/lecitin/cholin on memory? I have a feeling there have been studies showing it has the same effect as placebo.
ReplyDeleteThe working memory training isn't that unproblematic either: http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100420/full/4641111a.html
But this post definitely got me thinking about doing more exercise:-)