How cutting-edge research is showing the positive mental effects of
moving the body.
Nearly every American can probably remember their doctor
telling them to eat their vegetables and exercise, but for what reason? Most
people think that these recommendations benefit the physical body. For
instance, people lift weights to grow muscle or run miles burn the pizza they
ate last night. However, in his groundbreaking 2013 book Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain, Dr.
John Ratey from Harvard Medical School explains that the true benefits of
exercise are found within the brain. While there are physical benefits, these pale
in comparison to the profound mental benefits exercise causes.
Learning and
Motivation
Gym class at most schools are named physical education (PE)
programs. Whether it is playing soccer or capture the flag, the basic goal
behind these programs is to get children to move around. However, the paradox
is being shifted towards fitness based PE programs, in which the focus of these
programs is fitness exercise with an intention to improve brain function. In
Naperville, Illinois, one such fitness based physical education program began
in the early 1990s with the intent to stress fitness and the positive benefits
of the brain receives from fitness. What exactly does “fitness based physical
education” look like? The teachers use heart rate monitors to track the
physical workload of students as they exercise aerobically, whether this be
while students run miles and exercise on high-end Schwinn stationary
bikes
| An image of the typical heart rate tracker |
Not only did the Naperville students become physically fit due
to the high intensity workouts, but their tests scores increased along fitness
level .As Ratey explains, “When the students in Titusville or in Naperville go
for a mile run in gym, they are more prepared to learn in their other classes:
their senses are heightened; their focus and mood are improved; they’re less
fidgety and tense; and they feel more motivated and invigorated.” Furthermore,
exercise literally creates new nerve cells from stem cells, thus literally
creating new mental capacity. The
astonishing part is there is education data to backup this theory. The
Naperville 203 school district scored number one in the world on the math and
number six in the world on the TIMSS education test. For context, the average
US school scored eighteenth in science and nineteenth in math relative to the
world. “In addition to priming our state of mind, exercise influences learning
directly, at the cellular level, improving the brain’s potential to log in and
process new information.”
Regulating Emotions
Another non-physical, mental benefit from exercise is its
ability to combat stress, anxiety, and depression. When people are stressed
out, the brain gets locked into a pattern of stress. Over time, this pattern
can be damaging and makes people feel like the stress will never end. However,
moving the body can combat the stress. Exercise controls stress on a cellular
level, thus leaving people feeling emotionally and physically because the cells
repaired while the body moves. Due to the fight-or-flight phenomenon, in which
human beings evolved to either fight or run during conflict, when people
exercise when stressed, they actually are doing what humans evolved to do. This
is a main reason why moving the body can help relieve stress.
Approximately 18% of the US population suffers from anxiety.
In the brain, anxiety is when the sympathetic nervous system and the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis increase activity. As doctor Ratey
explains, “By using exercise to combat the symptoms of anxiety, you can treat
the state, and as your level of fitness improves, you chip away at the trait.
Over time, you teach your brain that the symptoms don’t always spell doom and
that you can survive; you’re reprogramming the cognitive misinterpretation.” Overall,
exercise while anxious provides a distraction, reduces muscle tension, builds
brain resources, teaches different outcome, reroutes your circuits, and
improves resilience.
With the emergence of function MRI and PET scans, scientists
have been able to see what depression looks like in the brain. Essentially,
depression is a change to the “emotional circuitry” of the brain and its
messengers such as norepinephrine, dopamine, and serotonin. This leads to a
breakdown at the cellular level, in which the brain is trapped in a negative
cycle it cannot work its way out of. Dr. Ratey finds that exercise is as good
if not better of a prescription for a person suffering from depression than
modern drugs like Zoloft or Lexapro. Not only can exercise treat depression,
but it is actually effective at preventing depression.
What Kind of Exercise Regime Is Best?
After reading about the numerous positive effects of
exercise, you might wonder what types and for how long you should exercise. Unfortunately,
it is not clear which type of exercise brings about the best mental benefits. As
a rule of thumb, some exercise is better than nothing and more is better than
less. “Research shows that the more fit you are, the more resilient your brain
and the better it functions both cognitively and psychologically.” A variety of
studies have shown that aerobic exercise can increase capillary volume in the
memory area of the hippocampus, increase neurotransmitters and neurotrophic
factors, and encourage neuroplasticity. There is essentially a positive
relationship between mental and physical strength. So whether you run, cycle,
or swim, you should mix up medium intensity workouts and high intensity
workouts to gain the benefits of exercising different muscle groups.
This is such a great topic. I know I always find that weeks that I make an effort to to go the gym or a group fitness class, my mental stamina is greater and my general mood a lot more positive. It would be interesting to see which level of intensity works best. I go to a lot of barre classes and walk on an incline on the treadmill, which are both low-intensity to burn fat. I wonder if higher intensity release more endorphins and would result in greater mental stamina?
ReplyDeleteI really had no idea exercise could have such an impact on the mind as well as the body. When I started as a pre-med, I pretty much gave up (or got too lazy) to exercise for around 2 years...could have been a bad decision. I wonder why not more initiative is put into promoting this cause?
ReplyDeleteThis is super interesting, many times I had so much work to do that I don't get to exercise or play tennis. I'll definitely keep that in mind for next time. It's also really interesting to read
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