Why Exercise Boosts Brainpower 331
aditi sends us a report from Reuters on research indicating that exercise boosts brainpower by building new brain cells in a brain region linked with memory and memory loss. Quoting: "Tests on mice showed they grew new brain cells in a brain region called the dentate gyrus, a part of the hippocampus that is known to be affected in the age-related memory decline that begins around age 30 for most humans. Researchers used magnetic resonance imaging scans to help document the process in mice — and then used MRIs to look at the brains of people before and after exercise. They found the same patterns, which suggests that people also grow new brain cells when they exercise."
Ballonee (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ballonee (Score:4, Informative)
Now....I gotta try to remember where the hell the gym is??
Re:Ballonee (Score:4, Funny)
How many Geek Mice do you know? (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's an interesting anecdote: Scientists were running rats through a maze with a reward system to measure how fast they learn. Rats soon learn the optimum path and get rewarded. COnclusion: rats are smart and learn. Now substitute in a ferret. Ferret searches maze and finds the food (
AHA! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:AHA! (Score:5, Funny)
Next Week (Score:3, Insightful)
How do I know this?
Because 99% of the really smart people I've met in my life are big, fat, dope-smoking UNIX guys who think a treadmill is a place where corn is ground up to make tires.
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Yes, that's right, I said peanut butter sandwich.
Re:Next Week (Score:4, Insightful)
Funny, 99% of the really smart people I know play sports in some form or the other (adventure sports, martial arts, traditional sports, running etc) and don't really believe in sitting down and spending every waking hour doing something related to their area of expertise.
In fact, the *really* smart people I know tend to have a life (family, friends, sports, parties) and usually, it is the wannabes that I know who tend to fit the profile that you describe.
And I have found out that a combination of good workout and good diet often helps me concentrate better and sleep better.
For instance, cut yourself off from high sugar, caffeine and soda, eat salads and run 5 miles a day for a month and see how much your productivity increases. You'll find that you can do more, you sleep better and feel a lot healthier.
Besides, sports are a great way to get rid of your frustration. For instance, I do a lot of rock-climbing, and nothing to make you feel better than an eight hour straight climbing session out there.
Re:Next Week (Score:4, Informative)
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I don't know about you, but five miles a day eating salads and I'd feel a lot like killing myself.
I don't spend a few hours every day exercising so I can eat rabbit food.
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Also, 5 miles/day isn't required to lose weight. In fact, if losing
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Secondly, I was mentioning 5 miles/day not to lose weight but to stay in shape - I run to improve my stamina (I'm a climber) and t
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If you don't want to read my link or google HIIT just trust me when I say I've switched people from steady state running to
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Hey, Stallone is an artist. Sample Artwork [imagemakersart.com]
Stallone isn't dumb (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Stallone isn't dumb (Score:5, Funny)
Wow, that happens to me too whenever I watch any of his films!
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Growth hormones - he's facing court in Australia (delayed for six weeks) for illegal importation of 48 vials of Jintropin.
Exersize Is Good For You? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Exersize Is Good For You? (Score:4, Funny)
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Back to Locke (Score:4, Insightful)
The challenge for computer geeks: finding a way to merge exercise with mostly-sedentary hobbies and jobs. Perhaps it's a job for mobile computing: Set a tablet PC in front of a treadmill, and read Slashdot while running?
Re:Back to Locke (Score:4, Interesting)
How dare you sir (Score:4, Funny)
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The virtual world is a better place to be. I can seek out people of common interests. I can block people who are jerks. I'm judged by my ability to form cogent arguments rather than my appearance or speech.
But, really, there's no reason you ever have to leave the virtual world. Most podcasts are about an hour long, which is plenty of time to get enough exercise. Plug in your earbuds and go for a walk. Turn around halfway through and do this three times a week. No need to leave the virtual world, and no nee
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Do as I say, not as I do?
He's just exercising free speech. Some might even consider telling someone what they believe is best for them to be a moral imperative. If I believe the box has a bomb in it, I'd probably tell the guy not to open the box. He's free to open the box, maybe even prove me wrong by showing that the box is empty. It's just advice after all, whether or not it's welcome.
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DDR < ITG (Score:2)
ITG tops out at 13, has hands/mines/rolls, and almost every song has an expert setting with a difficulty of at least 9. Plus, the average ITG arcade machine is of much higher quality than the average DDR machine.
Besides that, everyone plays single...double is where it's at. It takes much more energy to move your center of mass back and forth across a distance of several feet than it does
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Personally, if I could, I would just ski all the time for exercise. Damn seasonal sports. Of course, being in the flat state of Illinois doesn't help either.
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Skiing is primarily an anaerobic sport, unless you're talking about cross-country or unless you're the type who's constantly falling down and trying to get back up....
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But my heart rate goes up when I ski. There's a lot of movement in it.
Re:Back to Locke (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't get your opposition to using video games as an exercise tool. It seems to be more emotional than rational. Are you suggesting that there's somehow less value because you are exercising in a private place using technology?
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Does your heart rate get up?
Yes, just before you get run down by an SUV.
Biking is great. Coexisting with cars is challenging,
which kills the enjoyment for me.
This is not a rant against car drivers in general.
There are plenty of idiots operating both bikes and cars.
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Tell that to the people taking self-defense classes. I'd count self-defense a useful skill.
In addition, because of the nature of self-defense, it almost requires socializing. You can't partner with anyone if you don't trust them. And learn self-defense without a partner is only a little better than learning how to dance.
By the way, I
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Skills may be a bonus, but I don't see them as earth-shattering things. Maybe you can run faster, or swim a little bit better. Its not going to help me in my everyda
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The only sport I was able to stick with through high school was marching band. (And if you don't think that's a sport, you try running fifteen yards in five seconds while blowing a horn, facing front, and dressing lines.) Am I supposed to go out and start a marching band to get some exercise?
I think finding a sport you "love" is overrated. Finding a sport you can tolerate is better, then adding things you love to it. I hate walking and running, but I do it anyway because it gives me alone time to listen to
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Most just get their 30 minutes of cardio by just running around by themselves. So what if they get it from a video game. The running itself isn't teaching them anything about their body, that's something seperate. DDR's a social activity if you make it that way, same with running.
Exercise is good. Socializing is good. And having them play DDR as a starting point for fitness is good too. Who knows? Maybe after they've shed 10-15lbs on the DDR mat they'll be fit enough t
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I actually do the opposite, and you might look into it.
I do my weight training FIRST, use it to burn my glycogen stores, and then I do my aerobic activities. With the glycogen mostly depleted, you seem to go into fat burning mode faster when you start the aerobic exercise phase if you do it in this order...
Re:Back to Locke (Score:5, Funny)
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Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
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It's not just Locke that figured this out. Some of our greatest thinkers, warlords, martial arts masters, etc. have come up with the same conclusion. If this serves as "scientific proof" to something that has been known for ages then lets hope more people will get off their asses.
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Bike to work. (Score:2)
Ten years ago, I weighed 250 pounds. Today, I'm at about 175. (I don't keep accurate track anymore, but I do check every now and again.)
I started by biking to school. On the first day, I had to stop about a dozen times. I didn't realize just how out of shape I had become. I stuck with it (the 4th day is the worst, since that's when you're the sorest.) and kept biking to school. I biked all the way through university, and I've been biking to work since graduating. (Electrical E
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You're a fucking anti-social asshole aren't you? You make your ilk look horrible and I'm sure they really appreciate it.
So if I go jogging (Score:3, Funny)
What's the catch? Have I missed something?
Do I need more jogging?
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I depends on whether you jog on two legs or four.
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FTA (Score:4, Funny)
However, if your gym looks like this [cnn.net] one shown in the article, I think the blood will flow elsewhere
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That explains it! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That explains it! (Score:5, Funny)
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No, not particle theory, complex analysis [wikipedia.org].
This proves what I suspected all along... (Score:4, Funny)
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It says, "What sloths do when no one is around."
In then shows a picture of a sloth dancing and "dadada" from music.
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No brainer (Score:2)
I know that after I complete a heavy lifting routine or a good cardio work out, I feel great for the rest of the day. I think clearer. I don't feel any craving
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Y'know, It's almost as if humans evolved to exercise regularly.
Workout (Score:2)
People who don't exercise are often the way they are because exercise makes them feel HORRIBLE. Personally, I've tried to get into shape a number of times. But after three or four weeks of working out, I just can't take it anymore -- the pain, the exhaustion, the depression, the undirected feelings of anger,
Science! You gotta love it. (Score:4, Funny)
Note to everyone: doesn't mean stronger = smarter (Score:2)
Next project... (Score:2)
Minus the steroids, of course.
This is why the Wii and DS keep you going (Score:2, Interesting)
But in most scientific studies, the things that consistently help ameliorate the effects of aging are: mild to moderate exercise (even walking up stairs or parking 2 blocks away), a varied diet high in vegetables and fruits, drinking red wine (men) or grape juice (anyone), and more education.
I can't exercise! (Score:3, Funny)
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Desk work (Score:2)
While I did find links to desk exercise websites, they are most frequently some simple stretches and not really much of an exercise.
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Before I changed positions and moved offices, a friend of mine (also a trainer) had suggested to me that, though it would look funny, getting a large exercise ball to sit on at work in lieu of a chair
Brain cells, exercise, & smoking (Score:2, Interesting)
And if you act now... (Score:2)
Geeks, nerds and dorks alike, lend me your ears! You too can have a hot, steamy social life for just 30 minutes a day!
And as a free, no-cost-to-you-at-all bonus, if you act within the next few years, you may
Whoop de doo... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ya, I'm not so sure... (Score:5, Insightful)
They're not "dumb", but they're also not necessarily the intellectual type. From what I've seen, the reason for that is that your intellectual spends too much time in an introverted state to worry about the world around them. Regular exercise is not engaging to their internal senses, so they tend to find it "boring". The more extroverted types get their engagement from the world around them, and thus find pleasure in physical activity.
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Ok, list the number of them that can name all 50 states and count without looking at their hands and feet.
sorry, but most atheletes, specifically the pound each other type are not the brightest. I've never met a smart rugby player, But they are handy in a brawl.
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My fiance is in the science world and of the ones we know (a ton mind you) they all do some sort of exercise. Yet of all the IT people I know (again a lot) maybe 1% actually do anything.
Re:Ya, I'm not so sure... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Sure, but most *people* aren't particularly smart. Since most sports don't necessitate having a large amount of intelligence, you see a range similar to what you'd find in the rest of society. It has nothing to do with athletic people being stupid, it's just that intelligence doesn't influence your success in sports as much as in "regular" society. Even looking at different sports you are likely to find large diff
Re:Ya, I'm not so sure... (Score:5, Interesting)
I would argue that such ability takes a level of intelligence that, if applied to other pursuits, would be widely recognized as remarkable.
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The governor of the state of California would like to have a word with you.
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Re:simultaneous death/regrowth? (Score:4, Insightful)
High performance sporting is not healthy. Repeat: NOT healthy. I've been training for marathons with an Olympic athlete who consistently runs 42K in under 2 hours 15 minutes. He needs to take a continuos stream of dietary supplements and run 25 kilometers daily, use special cushioning on all his footwear to compensate for the deformation that the impact of running produces, and keep an extremely strict dietary regimen, not to mention constant sports massages to keep himself from cramping as well as a myriad of other things.
Being a professional means pushing your body to extremes it was not meant to take. We're not built to run such distances at those speeds.
Remember though, that only applies to the 0.001% of the population that plays professionally and has masochistic tendencies. Your average slashdotter should get off its ass and at the very least walk a half hour daily. I know that ever since I started running in the morning my day feels much better than before, and indeed I do feel sharper.
Dying Brain (Score:2)
Huh...
I think we know whose brain is really suffering from some cell-death.
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When I started bicycling, outdoors, each day I would tackle the same hill, and see how long it took to get up there, and back down. Used one of those handlebar bicycle computers. Going up, when it got hard, lots of cuss words were appropriate to the pain and extreme effort. That in itself did not boost brainpower, the same ones seemed appropriate on each assent. Soon, I varied the ride, going other places in the same outing. Looking for some more hills, where I could exercise my verba