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Science

Why Your Brain Needs Exercise (scientificamerican.com) 47

Answering this question requires that we rethink our views of exercise. From a report: People often consider walking and running to be activities that the body is able to perform on autopilot. But research carried out over the past decade by us and others would indicate that this folk wisdom is wrong. Instead exercise seems to be as much a cognitive activity as a physical one. In fact, this link between physical activity and brain health may trace back millions of years to the origin of hallmark traits of humankind. If we can better understand why and how exercise engages the brain, perhaps we can leverage the relevant physiological pathways to design novel exercise routines that will boost people's cognition as they age -- work that we have begun to undertake. To explore why exercise benefits the brain, we need to first consider which aspects of brain structure and cognition seem most responsive to it.

When researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, Calif., led by Fred Gage and Henriette Van Praag, showed in the 1990s that running increased the birth of new hippocampal neurons in mice, they noted that this process appeared to be tied to the production of a protein called brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). BDNF is produced throughout the body and in the brain, and it promotes both the growth and the survival of nascent neurons. The Salk group and others went on to demonstrate that exercise-induced neurogenesis is associated with improved performance on memory-related tasks in rodents. The results of these studies were striking because atrophy of the hippocampus is widely linked to memory difficulties during healthy human aging and occurs to a greater extent in individuals with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's. The findings in rodents provided an initial glimpse of how exercise could counter this decline.

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Why Your Brain Needs Exercise

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  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday December 24, 2019 @12:49PM (#59554084)

    I found my work becoming too humdrum and gust getting board too easily, which was in general lowering the quality of my work.
    So I picked up wood working at home. Where I got to use my mind solving different problems learning new methods and tricks.
    This in general has helped my mood, as well it offers new approaches to problems at work, which I found better ways of doing them.
    Much like exercise, you have to keep on increasing the dosage for it to continue to get better.

  • by DavenH ( 1065780 ) on Tuesday December 24, 2019 @12:58PM (#59554106)
    This is just my experience, but nearly all the good ideas I've had have been thought of during a long walk, To the tune of which, I incorporate it into my work schedule; if there's some problem that needs serious thinking, it's time to put on the boots.

    Another anecdote that springs to mind is that of Sri Aurobindo, who used to walk 8 hours every day doing meditation, undertaking exploration of consciousness on which many volumes have been written, while at the same time leading a party involved in the independence revolution in India.

    • Second this. I often go for hour long runs in the summer, and I have solved a lot of my problems during those times. For some reason it brings clarity and an ability to see things in a more objective manner (for me).
  • by SlithyMagister ( 822218 ) on Tuesday December 24, 2019 @01:01PM (#59554116)
    ... to pull just as I'm about to overeat for a couple of days.
    It's bad enough that lack of exercise will make me fat, did you have to tell me it would make me stupid too?

    Merry Christmas!
    • You're not overeating, you're just exercise the elasticity of your digestive system. That's what I tell myself anyhow, and I'd have to say that I feel pretty smart having thought of it.
  • I recently pondered, why I hate exercise and sports so much.

    And the result is: Because it is useless!

    I noticed that I may be completely wrecked and tired after a day of constructing some wooden contraption, or building a house, or even just fucking a hot girl... but I feel *great*! And I wanted to do it all the way through! It was fun!

    And then there's what we think of when we hear "exercise": Mind-numbingly repetitive motion in a bland room full of sweaty pain-compensation junkies, like it's still 1866!

    Than

    • "Exercise" is a novel concept that we had to introduce because we stopped moving. Now we even need science to figure that out, and I'm just annoyed how this is worded... "why our brain need exercise". Brain don't need exercise ! It needs movement and activity !

      I don't know actually, but I'm very sure that people 100,200,400,800,2000 years ago, did not "exercise", they just lived which meant to move.

      Nowdays.. you need to run "in-place" in a room, full of other people, to get that movement. You need to ma
      • There is more exercise than just running in place with a bunch of sweaty guys. There is the whole outdoors. Get on a bicycle. Too cold for you... How about 27F or -3c. https://connect.garmin.com/mod... [garmin.com] temperature in the top right of the map...

        Don't have time... you say??? The link is my ride to work...

        Work is too far to ride a bicycle??? The link is 13 miles to work. That is the long way there too.. My ride home from work is 18 miles and is the really long way... https://connect.garmin.com/mod... [garmin.com]
      • by rossdee ( 243626 )

        "
        I don't know actually, but I'm very sure that people 100,200,400,800,2000 years ago, did not "exercise", they just lived which meant to move."

        People haven't been around for a hundred trillion years, in fact the universe itself is less than 14 billion years old.

    • by TeknoHog ( 164938 ) on Tuesday December 24, 2019 @02:09PM (#59554314) Homepage Journal
      It probably depends on where you live. Here in the old world, it is safe to walk from place to place, so one can get plenty of "exercise" by going where you need to go anyway. I'm over 40 and I've never owned a car, though I sometimes take the bus if I need to go further across the city. I also have a standing desk and I love it. The only formal exercise I do is a bit of yoga.
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        Here in the old world, it is safe to walk from place to place

        Here in the new world, we walk wearing plate carriers, an AR15 and full military load-out. That's even better exercise.

        • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
          Om a day to day basis, when not doing military service? My question is why? Obviously its good exercise, but all that gear must be quite costly,and it must be quire a sifht if multiple people meat up.. Or you might actually bein the military, in that case thanks fir doung your bit, no metter how illconseved the current deployment might or might not be (somrhing I’m not qoulified to comment on hsving neither the suficeien ammont of intel or the skill set to be of any use when ammo starts flying)
    • Most people in my family tend to agree with you. We are all craftsmen and they scoff at the idea of paying to work out in a gym when it's not unusual to move a ton or so of material during a day on a job AND get paid for it. Unfortunately their bodies are rapidly deteriorating and their mobility impaired due to bone spurs, nerve damage, and other issues associated with repetitive motion.

      This is why I exercise. There are muscles I like to use and muscles I need to use. A solid exercise routine ensures tha
  • "Do -the last even number prime before 100- jumps"

    There, the proof that doing physical exercise your brain... How much will you pay me for the proof?

  • The general consensus was that Stephen Hawking was a smart individual, however his appearance suggests exercise was not often on the menu.

    Also, exercise and thinking both require energy. Shouldn't there be a supply/demand problem here?
    • How would that make sense? Are you suggesting that an average person has some system or capability for telling the difference between a genius and an idiot?

      A consensus here tells you something about public perceptions, it doesn't tell you anything about the subject of those feelings.

    • Your example is very good)) To be a loader you need to develop muscles, to be a scientist you need to train your brain. Although a break is needed both here and there. When I was tired of studying at the university, I was not shy to use the guys from rushessay [rush-essays.com]. It gave me a chance to rest and get new ideas from professionals. Did I want to go to the gym at the same time? Not at all)))
  • Motivation! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cusco ( 717999 ) <brian@bixby.gmail@com> on Tuesday December 24, 2019 @02:16PM (#59554332)

    Have trouble motivating yourself to go for that walk every day? Get a beagle! Take him for a walk at the same time every day for a week, and you will **NEVER** be able to skip that walk for the next 15 years.

    My wife is an incredible cook, the only reason why I'm not a shapeless blob is that those dogs walk my legs off twice a day.

    • Your motto then should be "A beagle for your bagels". I suspect buying a cat would be even healthier since you won't just be walking but running after it.
    • I walk a lot too, I wouldn't want to give it up, but if you do the math it burns no calories.

      Moderate exercise has lots of health benefits, but only heavy exercise actually burns enough to affect your weight or how much food you can eat.

  • Long walks, woodworking, sex, etc., are insufficient exercise to have a noticeable effect on your cognitive function. You really need to take up some kind of sport like running, cycling, soccer, etc., i.e. hard exercise that keeps you out of breath for at least 30 minutes, to get that benefit. If long walks, woodworking, & sex feel like a workout to you, you're in trouble.
    • Workouts are the typical Western solution to the fitness problem. There are other ways. Want to stress you lungs? Buy a brass or wind instrument and practice slowly for half an hour or more a day, focusing on your breathing rather than on the musicality of the piece.

      Static isometric exercises can also do the trick. This type of exercises include load bearing yoga poses, such as the one where you stand on one leg (tree) or do a push-and-hold (plank, basically a static one cycle push-up held for half-a-minut

    • Long walks, woodworking, sex, etc., are insufficient exercise to have a noticeable effect on your cognitive function... ... for at least 30 minutes...

      There is your problem right there, your concept of "long" is too short, and you aren't good enough at sex or woodworking to see the benefits.

  • ... eliminate humans.
    Who needs to do anything or even think with the future of AI and robotics.

  • Of course excerise is very important. But so is the bacteria in our Gut.

    It's becoming obvious that the gut Bacteria plays an active role in instructing the Brain and therefore the rest of the body.

    So perhaps in the future we'll be offered a pill that keeps our Gut bacteria inline and then excerise together with visual, smell and audio stimulus will keep the whole body in fine fettle.

  • "we rethink our views of exercise" maybe you're just late to the party? many people have known about this for many years.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Time to fund sports and gym time again.
      All the charity work, NGO, support going to "computers" and "code" did nothing for most nations over decades.
      Sports would result in a more active population, work for sports related teaching.
      A lot less money than buying all the new computers, software, apps, learn to code robot kits, networking... for students who will not recall much a month later.
  • If you think of it that way it makes lots of sense. When your body is vibrantly healthy your brain tends to work better. If you're fat, have little endurance, chronic health problems like diabetes, your brain can't work optimally.
  • The mind body connection has been recognized for a long long time, e.g., yoga.
  • I prefer to study https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] whenever my brain needs exercise

Time is the most valuable thing a man can spend. -- Theophrastus

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