It is universally accepted that the benefits of exercise go well beyond fitness, from reducing the risk of disease to improving sleep and enhancing mood.
The benefits of exercise go well beyond fitness. It helps reduce the risk of disease, improve sleep and enhance mood. Physical activity gives cognitive function a boost as well as fortifying memory and safeguarding thinking skills. A new study has now revealed that exercise can enhance your vision. Intrigued by recent findings that neuron firing rates in the regions of mouse and fly brains associated with visual processing increase during physical activity, UC Santa Barbara psychologists Barry Giesbrecht and Tom Bullock wanted to know if the same might be true for the human brain.
‘Low-intensity exercise boosts activation in the visual cortex, the part of the cerebral cortex that plays an important role in processing visual information.’
To find out, they designed an experiment using behavioral measures
and neuroimaging techniques to explore the ways in which brief bouts of
physical exercise impact human performance and underlying neural
activity. The researchers found that low-intensity exercise boosted
activation in the visual cortex, the part of the cerebral cortex that
plays an important role in processing visual information. Their results
appear in the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience."We show that the increased activation - what we call arousal - changes how information is represented, and it's much more selective," said co-author Giesbrecht, a professor in UCSB's Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences. "That's important to understand because how that information then gets used could potentially be different.
"There's an interesting cross-species link that shows these effects of arousal might have similar consequences for how visual information is processed," he continued. "That implies the evolution of something that might provide a competitive advantage in some way."
To investigate how exercise affects different aspects of cognitive function, the investigators enlisted 18 volunteers. Each of them wore a wireless heart rate monitor and an EEG (electroencephalogram) cap containing 64 scalp electrodes. While on a stationary bicycle, participants performed a simple orientation discrimination task using high-contrast stimuli composed of alternating black and white bars presented at one of nine spatial orientations. The tasks were performed while at rest and during bouts of both low- and high-intensity exercise.
The scientists then fed the recorded brain data into a computational model that allowed them to estimate the responses of the neurons in the visual cortex activated by the visual stimuli. They analyzed the responses while participants were at rest and then during low- and high-intensity exercise.
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"We found that the peak response is enhanced during low-intensity exercise relative to rest and high-intensity exercise," said lead author Bullock, a postdoctoral researcher in UCSB's Attention Lab. "We also found that the curve narrows in, which suggests a reduction in bandwidth. Together, the increased gain and reduced bandwidth suggest that these neurons are becoming more sensitive to the stimuli presented during the low-intensity exercise condition relative to the other conditions."
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From a broader perspective, this work underscores the importance of exercise. "In fact, the benefits of brief bouts of exercise might provide a better and more tractable way to influence information processing - versus, say, brain training games or meditation - and in a way that's not tied to a particular task," Giesbrecht concluded.
Source-Eurekalert