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Exercise, Mitochondrial DNA, and Brain Fitness

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One very influential theory of why our physical and mental functions decline with age holds that changes in our DNA accumulate over time so that out cells don’t work any more. Perhaps the most important part of our DNA exists in every cell in a special part called the mitochondia. Mitochondria are especially important because they are the part of the cell that helps it generate energy. DNA contains the programs that generate energy, but over time errors accumulate in the programs until eventually they don’t work very well any more. Errors in the programs that run our cells happen all the time — but when we’re younger the cells can fix themselves. As we get older, the cells don’t fix themselves as well. The result: our bodies don’t work as well as they used to. Over time, things start breaking and can’t be fixed. Eventually . . .

A recent study reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science reports on a way to reduce the errors, at least in mice who are prone to an increased number of DNA errors. These mice have an increased number of errors in their DNA, and even early in life start to show signs of aging that are eerily similar to those seen in humans: hair loss, graying, low of body weight, and problems in mobility. Researchers at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, compared mice with the increased number of errors to regular mice, and looked at what happened if some of the error-prone mice spent time exercising.

The group of the mice who had DNA errors exercised for 45 minutes on three days a week for 5 months. The researchers then compared the three groups: (1) DNA error-prone who didn’t exercise, (2) DNA error-prone who exercised, and (3) regualr mice who had normal DNA. Result: The error-prone mice who exercised looked the same as the regular mice. They weren’t just stronger, or in better shape, or able to run longer. They “lacked visible features of the accelerated aging phenotype (alopecia and graying hair) and were visually indistinguishable from age-matched … littermates” (page 4135).

Does this mean that if you start exercising regularly you can reverse aging? Probably not. But good research continues to accumulate that shows that exercise can improve cognition and keep the effects of aging to a minimum.

You can find an abstract for the article here. To read the full article, you will need a subscription to the journal.

5 Ways to Train Working Memory for Brain Fitness

Map of South Florida

If working memory is important for brain fitness, and training it may make it better (and even improve scores on other cognitive measures), how do you train it?

Here are 5 ways to train working memory:

The single best way to train working memory for brain fitness is to use (almost the) same computer program used by Jaeggi et al. in her study. You can’t get exactly the same software that will automate something called n-back training. You can, however, use Brain Workshop, free open-source software that closely imitates the procedures used in studies of working memory. The software for brain fitness training is free, and you can download it here.

As useful as n-back training is, you may want to branch out and do other things. A visual game that can train working memory is called concentration, a matching game that makes you remember the position of pictures while you look for a match. There are lots of these kinds of games on the web (and one version is included in the Posit Science brain training software. I put one up on the Web – click here to try it out. (I borrowed the code for this game from a book called ActionScript Game Programming University and can’t take personal credit for it. It’s a great book about Flash game programming, and you can find the author’s website here.)

Away from your computer? Why not try Sudoku? You can do it on paper in books, and you can find a number of applications for your phone or handheld game device. You can even download and print them from the web. I found several sources, including here. Don’t know what Sudoku is? Find out more about it here.

Standing in line at the grocery store? Pick out numbers off the cover of the magazines and add them in your head. Too easy? Subtract them and multiply by another number. Still too easy? When was the last time you did a square root in your head?

Sitting on the couch at home? Spend time visualizing the route from your home to a place you only go to once in a while. Get a mental picture of your own home, then create a mental image of the first turn, and then the next, and the next. Did you get there? Now reverse the route until you get home.

Brain Fitness

Brain Training Study Off the Ground!

computer with apple for teacher

After overcoming a number of obstacles, our study of the effects of cognitive training on fluid intelligence has finally started. We’re enrolling participants from our local Life Long Learning Program, all of whom are 50 years or older. In the study, we are comparing the effects of working memory training …

Changes in Brain Size with Aging

Picture of chimpanzee

Understanding brain aging has to be research priority. The average age of people in the US is increasing. This means that there are more older people at risk for diseases that occur as people get older, such as Alzheimer’s. In people, the size of the brain decreases as they get …

Exercise, Mitochondrial DNA, and Brain Fitness

Mouse on white background

One very influential theory of why our physical and mental functions decline with age holds that changes in our DNA accumulate over time so that out cells don’t work any more. Perhaps the most important part of our DNA exists in every cell in a special part called the mitochondia. …

The Default Mode Network and Brain Fitness

Man sleeping on grass

If brain fitness is more than just trying to avoid memory loss as you get older (and I think it is), then understanding how you think is (I think) critical. Sometimes called metacognition, this means not just thinking, but thinking about thinking. Follow that? Metacognition is the idea that we …

Mindfulness Meditation, Brain Fitness, and Gray Matter

Buddhist monk looking out over the forest

Most people know that the brain is smaller with age, at least in part due to loss of brain cells in parts of the brain related to perception, memory, and executive processes. Anything that can slow down or reverse the process should be of interest to all of us, whatever our age. …

RSS Worry and GAD Blog

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