Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
Health

After Yoga, Climb A Tree To Boost Your Memory

IANS, 03 Aug, 2015 12:27 PM
  • After Yoga, Climb A Tree To Boost Your Memory
You may have attempted this during childhood but climbing a tree and balancing on a beam along with yoga exercises can dramatically improve cognitive skills in adults too, researchers at the University of North Florida have found.
 
By doing activities that make us think, we can exercise our brains as well as our bodies, they said.
 
“By taking a break to do activities that are unpredictable and require us to consciously adapt our movements, we can boost our working memory to perform better in the classroom and the boardroom,” said research associate Dr Ross Alloway.
 
The results suggest that working memory improvements can be made in just a couple of hours of these physical exercises.
 
“Improving working memory can have a beneficial effect on so many areas in our life. It is exciting to see that 'proprioceptive dynamic activities' can enhance it in such a short period of time,” added study co-author Tracy Alloway.
 
For the study, researchers recruited adults ages 18 to 59 and tested their working memory.
Proprioception, the awareness of body positioning and orientation, is associated with working memory.
 
One group was given dynamic activities while the other were asked to join yoga classes, defined as “static proprioceptive activities”.
 
The participants undertook activities like climbing trees, walking and crawling on a beam approximately three-inches wide, moving while paying attention to posture, running barefoot, navigating over, under and around obstacles, as well as lifting and carrying awkwardly-weighted objects.
 
After two hours, participants were tested again.
 
The researchers found that their working memory capacity had increased dramatically by 50 percent.
 
“Proprioceptively dynamic training” may place a greater demand on working memory because as environment and terrain changes, the individual recruits working memory to update information to adapt appropriately.
 
“Though the yoga control group engaged in activities that required awareness of body position, it was relatively static as they performed the yoga postures in a small space which did not allow for locomotion or navigation,” the authors noted.
 
However, neither control group experienced working memory benefits.
 
The paper was published in the journal Perceptual and Motor Skills.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Public awareness needed to check breast cancer: Experts

Public awareness needed to check breast cancer: Experts
With around 1.5 lakh breast cancer cases being diagnosed every year in India, health experts Saturday called for more public awareness and community...

Public awareness needed to check breast cancer: Experts

Drugs to abet cancer cells suicide found

Drugs to abet cancer cells suicide found
The combination of two drugs, called TRAIL and a CDK9 inhibitor, forced the cancer cells to self-destruct, the findings showed....

Drugs to abet cancer cells suicide found

Young heart can heal itself faster

Young heart can heal itself faster
Washington- The heart holds its own pool of immune cells capable of helping it to heal after injury, finds research, adding that the harmful...

Young heart can heal itself faster

How genes affect Ebola patients

How genes affect Ebola patients
New York- The Ebola virus affects different people differently, say researchers, adding that genetic factors could be behind this mild-to-deadly....

How genes affect Ebola patients

Healthy diet for infants prevents obesity later

Healthy diet for infants prevents obesity later
If you do not want your baby to grow up into an overweight adult, make sure you feed him or her healthy diet from the very first year, a study suggests....

Healthy diet for infants prevents obesity later

Himalayan Viagra fuels gold rush for local Tibetans

Himalayan Viagra fuels gold rush for local Tibetans
Overwhelmed by people trying to find the prized medicinal fungus known as Himalayan Viagra, two isolated Tibetan communities have managed...

Himalayan Viagra fuels gold rush for local Tibetans