Study Finds You Can Grow Brain Cells Through Exercise 99
phantomfive writes: Researchers have discovered that aerobic exercise may increase neurogenesis. Based on the results, rats that were put on a treadmill grew more brain cells than rats that didn't. Resistance training seemed to have no effect. This is significant, because the neuron reserve of the hippocampus can be increased, thus preconditions for learning for humans could be improved simply through aerobic exercise.
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Most prefferably, I'd want to have a longer dick. Not that mine is small. But I still want it bigger. Like mr. trump, he wants more and more voters vote for him.
How quickly this escalated from more brain cells to more voters for Trump. Even via a detour. All in one line.
It's because Donald Trump is like Hitler!
Godwins law? (Score:2)
Godwins law already? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Nerve connections for muscles (Score:5, Informative)
Brain cells and associated nerve connections are necessary to operate muscles. If you exercise more, or perhaps even hone a skill associated with exercise (playing basketball or tennis perhaps), then you would also expect the brain to grow connections associated with these activities.
So yes, the brain grows. Does it make a person smarter? Not necessarily, it makes a person more able to move that muscle with finer control.
Also, this seems to be a repeat of the same study in the past, though its first occurrence on /.?:
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/10/study-people-who-exercise-have-larger-brains-later-in-life/264017/ [theatlantic.com]
http://www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2013/10/13/how-exercise-makes-your-brain-grow/#18d2c88248c1 [forbes.com]
No, it's the hippocampus that benefits (Score:1)
> In rodents, the hippocampus has been studied extensively as part of a brain system responsible for spatial memory and navigation. Many neurons in the rat and mouse hippocampus respond as place cells: that is, they fire bursts of action potentials when the animal passes through a specific part of its environment. Hippocampal place cells interact extensively with head direction cells, whose activity acts as an inertial compass, and conjecturally with grid cells in the neighboring entorhinal cortex.
https:
Re:Nerve connections for muscles (Score:5, Insightful)
so why then doesn't this work for 'resistance' training? After all, you are exercising muscles.
Re:Nerve connections for muscles (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Nerve connections for muscles (Score:4, Informative)
Resistance training leads to change in the nervous system, but possibly not in the brain. Relevant [nih.gov] research [nih.gov]
The studies you mention are from 1988 and 2006, respectively. A more recent study from 2015 [nih.gov] concludes otherwise:
This study provides the first evidence for strength training-related changes in white matter and putamen in the healthy adult brain.
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That is even better news :)
To be honest, resistance training has so many other benefits that I don't really need additional reasons to do it. Heavy lifting has fixed the back and shoulder pains that had plagued me for decades.
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Heavy lifting has fixed the back and shoulder pains that had plagued me for decades.
Ditto. (Well, maybe not the decades part; I started a regimen sooner than that. Back extensions with weights were really what fixed up my back.)
Re:Nerve connections for muscles (Score:4, Interesting)
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The slashdot moderation system is horribly broken, isn't it? OP gets modded +5 Informative for posting something that's flatly wrong per the article, and a link that contradicts his own post (the first one, not going to click the forbes one). So neither the OP nor the mods read the article. It's the blind leading the blind around here.
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that would include free weights... which again is resistance training... but a heck of a lot harder than using a weightlifting machine where the weighs are constrained to a simple fixed axis of motion...
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If this were true, weightlifters would have larger brains than aerobic exercisers (since they use upper and lower, not just lower like aerobic).
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Does this mean that we're going to see our senators and representatives doing Japanese style mass exercise sessions every morning with weights? After all, if there is one thing in this divided country that most folks agree on, it is that many of our elected representatives could use a few more brain cells.
Adding Endorphin receptors... (Score:2)
Jocks are Junkies too, lol.
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Re:Nerve connections for muscles (Score:4, Informative)
In my research of nootropics, I came across Noopept.
Noopept is considered one of the most powerful nootropics, a thousand times stronger than Piracetam. Among other things, Noopept increases BNF and BDNF in the brain. These chemicals power neurogenesis, encouraging the formation of new brain cells and greatly increasing neuroplasticity.
What does "greatly increasing" mean?
Scientists test rats with many apparatuses. Most of these are repetitive tools, like a pool of water with a few small, hidden platforms (you drop the rat in to drown, and it panics and seeks out the platform; then you repeat the trial, leaving or moving the platforms, reorienting the device, or whatnot, to see if the rat can recognize environment cues or apply an efficient search algorithm). One of the most useful tools is a simple T maze, in which corridors abruptly meet a wall with a choice of left or right alternate path.
Rats navigating the T maze eventually find food at the end. In repeated trials, rats learn the topology of the maze, eventually running to the end of the T maze by the most direct path. This essentially tests rat memory.
Rats run on a wheel for 10 minutes before and after running a T maze *consistently* learn the maze in half as many trials as a control group of rats kept lazy in cage.
The source of this increase in learning speed? An increase in BNF and BDNF in the brain.
Bicycling, running, jumping jacks, whatnot. These things will exercise you. The exercise temporarily increases BNF and BDNF levels measurable in human blood serum. Like the rats, the humans become significantly more intelligent.
This study doesn't surprise me. I already knew this shit.
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Brain cells and associated nerve connections are necessary to operate muscles. If you exercise more, or perhaps even hone a skill associated with exercise (playing basketball or tennis perhaps), then you would also expect the brain to grow connections associated with these activities.
So yes, the brain grows. Does it make a person smarter? Not necessarily, it makes a person more able to move that muscle with finer control.
The summary said that resistance training had "no effect", so it's not entirely a case of exercising your nerves. More plausible is that aerobic exercise increases the amount of oxygen or at least the blood flow to the head, providing the cells there with more material or fuel for growing.
Okay, time to read the article.
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I wonder if it has more to do with boredom and activity than aerobic exercise...
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Re:Alzheimers? (Score:5, Interesting)
There is some evidence [nbcnews.com] that exercise benefits people with Alzheimer's, but the how and why is not well understood.
Wait... (Score:1)
So people who are both stupid and aerobically exercise are that dumb even *after* they're cheating?
No cure for Stupid (Score:2, Funny)
So people who are both stupid and aerobically exercise are that dumb even *after* they're cheating?
There is no proven cure for Stupid, only for ignorant.
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There is no proven cure for Stupid,
Sure there is. You can even buy it at Walmart. [walmart.com] Or you can go old school Doom [walmart.com], with no pesky waiting period.
Well.. (Score:5, Funny)
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So... (Score:5, Funny)
So, they're saying I can get smarter by logging off of slashdot and going outside?
Re:So... (Score:4, Funny)
If you just exercised more, you would already know the answer to your question.
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Re:So... (Score:4, Funny)
Well... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Maybe. It's possible that some rats are more predisposed to see this particular brain benefit, or it could be that some rats are more predisposed to receive benefits in general from aerobic exercise.
We all hear the litany of reasons for aerobic exercise -- cardiovascular benefits, mental health, insulin response, and so on. The statistical association is overwhelming. But we also all know people who don't exercise and still score well on these factors, as well as people who do exercise and still fall victim
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... if you're a rat. (Score:2)
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Oh, they only did that after the rats had been killed.
Then again, I'm convinced that there are less invasive ways of monitoring changes in the brain. They're just a bit more expensive.
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Lot of ignorant people who can't be bother to read the article let alone done any simple searches.
Reproduce this study. (Score:1)
Old News from the 90s (Score:1)
Several people are linking to new articles from a few years ago. This information has been known since the 90s. Running has been shown to enhance neurogenesis and learning. Interesting enough spending time with a creative group of people expressing your ideas also promotes neurogenesis. It appears the key to health and well being is exercise and good social connections.
Proof in 1980s (Score:2)
Known for years... (Score:2)
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Can't prove it by the athletes I've met. Antidotal evidence suggests that the effect may be limited.
Ah, but think how much more stupid they might have been without the athletics.
Disappointed (Score:2)
Why is it always the hard stuff like exercise? Why is it never, "You can grow brain cells through drinking and watching porn"?
Life ain't fair.
Not a complete study... (Score:2)
What about anaerobic exercise? Technically it should be the reverse as you are starving your whole system of oxygen.
Or are they afraid of pointing out that running at 90% output or higher for extended periods of time is actually very very bad for you.
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Rick Snyder uses this research to fend off. (Score:2)
Study Finds Rat Can Grow Brain Cells Through Exer (Score:1)
Might explain (Score:2)
Re:By that logic, the Japanese... (Score:4, Informative)
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Dumb thinking (Score:2)
Some people use all available brain cells for dumb thinking. Having more brain cells doesn't make them smarter, it would expand their capabilities in stupidity.
Steven Hawking (Score:2)
...does not agree with the results of this study.
Skeptical (Score:1)