To Measure Cognition.
Regular exercise improves the ability of overweight, previously
inactive children to think, plan and even do math, say researchers.
They hope the findings in 171 overweight 7- to 11-year-olds – all
sedentary when the study started – gives educators the evidence they need to
ensure that regular, vigorous physical activity is a part of every school day,
said corresponding author Dr. Catherine Davis. “I hope these findings
will help reestablish physical activity’s important place in the schools in
helping kids stay physically well and mentally sharp,” Davis said. “For
children to reach their potential, they need to be active.”
To measure cognition, researchers used the Cognitive Assessment System
and Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement III that measure abilities such as
planning and academic skills such as math and reading. A subset of the children
received functional magnetic resonance imaging highlighting increased or
decreased areas of brain activity.
MRIs showed those who exercised experienced increased brain activity in
the prefrontal cortex – an area associated with complex thinking, decision
making and correct social behavior – and decreased activity in an area of the
brain that sits behind it. The shift forward appears consistent with more
rapidly developing cognitive skills, Davis said.
And the more they exercised, the better the result. Intelligence scores
increased an average 3.8 points in those exercising 40 minutes per day after
school for three months with a smaller benefit in those exercising 20 minutes
daily.
Activity in the part of their brain responsible for so-called executive
function also increased in children who exercised. “In kids you just don’t know
what impact you are going to have when you improve their ability to control
their attention, to behave better in school, to make better choices,” Davis
notes. “Maybe they will be more likely to stay in school and out of trouble.”
Similar improvements were seen in math skills; interestingly, no
improvements were found in reading skill. Researchers note that improved math
achievement was “remarkable” since no math lessons were given and suggests
longer intervention could produce even better results.
Children in the exercise program played hard, with running games, hula
hoops and jump ropes, raising their heart rates to 79 percent of maximum, which
is considered vigorous.
Cognitive improvements likely resulted from the brain stimulation that
came from movement rather than resulting cardiovascular improvements, such as
increased blood and oxygen supplies, Davis said. “You cannot move your body
without your brain.”
The researchers hypothesize that such vigorous physical activity
promotes development of brain systems that underlie cognition and behavior.
Animal studies have shown that aerobic activity increases growth factors so the
brain gets more blood vessels, more neurons and more connections between
neurons. Studies in older adults have shown exercise benefits the brain and
Davis’s study extends the science to children and their ability to learn in
school.
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