Exercising about four hours after you learn something can improve how well you remember it, according to a small study
published in the journal Current Biology this month.
Of
course, working out on the regular has long been associated with
enhanced memory and thinking skills. The new findings, however, offer a
specific time window for taking an acute advantage of this association,
said
Guillén Fernández,
a co-author of the study and professor of cognitive neuroscience at the
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour in the
Netherlands.
"In
addition, it might lead to additional studies optimizing the delay and
intensity of post-learning exercise to achieve best study success, which
might be relevant for education," Fernández said. In other words, the
study supports the idea that after-school sports can help students
retain what was learned in the classroom.
For
the study, 72 men and women completed a task in which they watched 90
photos appear one-by-one on a screen for about 40 minutes. The
participants were instructed to remember exactly where on the screen the
pictures appeared.
Next,
the participants were separated into three groups. One group exercised
immediately after completing the task. The second group exercised four
hours after completing the task, and the third didn't exercise at all.
The groups that exercised took part in a 35-minute interval training
session on an exercise bike.
Two
days later, all of the participants completed a test measuring how well
they remembered the picture locations. They did so while hooked up to an
MRI scanner.
What
did the researchers find? It turned out that exercising immediately
after learning the picture locations had no effect on memory retention,
but waiting four hours resulted in a 10% increase in memory retention,
on average.
That's not all. The MRI
scans revealed that, during the recall test, those who exercised after
waiting a few hours had increased activity in their brains' hippocampus,
a region associated with learning and memory.
"We
have no conclusive answer why the immediate exercise didn't enhance
memory," Fernández said, but he added that a follow-up study is underway
to examine the influence that exercise has on memory in greater detail.
If you'd rather nap than work out, you're in luck. Separate studies have shown that
sleeping soon after learning something can also
help you remember it.
"Sleep
helps transform short-term memories into long-term memories by helping
make stronger connections between these new experiences and our old
memories, that allows the new experiences to be integrated with our
general knowledge and understanding of the world," said Sara Mednick, a
professor of psychology at the University of California, Riverside.
Mednick led research, published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
this month, that describes the role the body's autonomic nervous system
plays during sleep in memory consolidation, a process that many
previously thought was just the work of the central nervous system.
For
the research, 81 men and women were asked to complete word problems in
the morning. They also were "primed" with unrelated words in a separate
exercise. Shortly after completing the task, 60 of the participants took
a 90-minute nap while the rest watched a video. The researchers tracked
the heart rate activity of the napping participants while they
experienced rapid eye movement sleep to gauge the involvement of the
autonomic nervous system. The autonomic nervous system regulates
heartbeat.
Later
in the day, all of the participants were asked to complete word
problems for a second time. These problems were either identical to the
previous task or completely new, or the answers had been primed.
The
researchers noticed that the participants who had a nap were more
likely than those who didn't nap to use the primed words to answer the
problems, which suggests that they were thinking more "flexibly" to use
the primed words in new ways. In fact, the researchers could account for
up to 73% of the performance increase from the morning task to the
second task by considering the REM and heart rate activity that was
recorded during napping.
Thus, the autonomic nervous system may be an unexplored contributor to how sleep can boost memory.
"Other
studies have shown that delaying sleep after learning is not good for
retention," Mednick said. "The current study suggests that both the mind
and body are working together to improve memory."
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