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SEPTEMBER
/ OCTOBER 2003 |
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This article originally appeared in the July 2003 Harvard Women's Health Watch and is provided courtesy of Harvard Health Publications. Physical exercise sharpens the brain Scientists already know from laboratory experiments that
rodents who spend a lot of time running in exercise wheels have better brains
than their layabout lab mates. But until now, we’ve had no physiological
proof that fitness improves the human brain. In the first study of its kind,
scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign scanned the
brains of 55 subjects (more than half of them women), ages 55–79,
and measured their maximal oxygen uptake (a gauge of aerobic fitness) during
walking and treadmill tests. Participants ranged from sedentary to those
in peak-performance fitness.
In a related study, the researchers analyzed data from 18 controlled studies that investigated the effects of aerobic fitness training on cognitive ability in women and men ages 55–80. They found that exercise had clear but selective benefits (Psychological Sciences, March 2003). The effect was greatest for executive control functions, such as attention, organization, and planning. Programs that combined strength training with aerobic exercise were more effective than aerobic training alone. The researchers also found that exercising less than 30 minutes per session had very little impact on cognitive function. |
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