According to a recent study, just a few minutes of light exercise can give your brain an immediate push in the right direction, helping to improve memory, among other things.
As we age, our memory is likely to become less reliable.
Although this is considered to be an inevitable part of growing old, scientists are keen to understand how it might be curtailed.
As the population ages, understanding ways to reduce cognitive slowing are more important than ever.
The hippocampus, which is a brain structure that sits within the temporal lobe, is of particular interest to researchers trying to understand this problem.
Vital for learning and memory, the hippocampus is particularly
In the past, studies have revealed that exercise can enhance some aspects of cognitive ability and improve memory performance. Also, adults who are more physically active tend to have increased hippocampal volume.
In order to find out why exercise might benefit the hippocampus and memory performance, some scientists have asked whether physical activity stimulates the growth of new brain cells in the hippocampus (known as neurogenesis).
This process would take some time, and, therefore, any benefits to brain health would take a while to become apparent.
Recently, however, a team from the University of California, Irvine and the University of Tsukuba in Japan ran some experiments to investigate whether exercise may enhance memory over a much shorter space of time: minutes, rather than days or weeks.
The study authors explain that it certainly is possible that brain cell growth could be stimulated by exercise, but there might also be a quicker mechanism involved that runs in parallel.
The authors wanted to chart any measurable improvements to memory-based brain activity in the first few minutes following light exercise. Their findings were published recently in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
So, to investigate, 36 healthy young adult participants carried out just 10 minutes of light exercise. The team then used high-resolution functional MRI to measure any changes in brain activity.
The brain imaging showed improved connectivity between the dentate gyrus, which is part of the hippocampus that is thought to play a role in laying down new episodic memories, and cortical areas involved in detailed memory processing.
Also, when the researchers tested the participants using a memory recall test, the increased connectivity correlated with improved memory performance.
“What we observed is that these 10-minute periods of exercise showed results immediately afterward.”
Project co-leader Michael Yassa
Yassa believes that it is “encouraging to see more people keeping track of their exercise habits — by monitoring the number of steps they’re taking, for example,” he explains. “Even short walking breaks throughout the day may have considerable effects on improving memory and cognition.”
Yassa and his team are keen to continue investigating. Next, they plan to run longer-term studies in older adults who have an increased risk of cognitive decline.
They want to understand if regular, brief, light exercise alters the brain’s structure and function over time. He says:
“The hippocampus is critical for the creation of new memories; it’s one of the first regions of the brain to deteriorate as we get older […] Improving the function of the hippocampus holds much promise for improving memory in everyday settings.”
Finding that light exercise could have a measurable impact on the parts of the brain responsible for memory is the first step; but next, we need to develop a clearer understanding of the ideal amount of activity necessary to make a real and lasting difference.
As Yassa says, “Clearly, there is tremendous value to understanding the exercise prescription that best works in the elderly so that we can make recommendations for staving off cognitive decline.”
In conclusion, the next time you have misplaced something important, it might be worth trying 10 minutes of yoga; it certainly won’t hurt.