Just 20 minutes of physical activity may benefit your memory

Just 20 minutes of physical activity may benefit your memory

A study suggests that 20 minutes of moderate cycling increases brain activity in the hippocampus, a region critical for learning and memory.
This increased hippocampal activity may support memory consolidation, potentially helping the brain process and store information.

AHigher exercise intensity was associated with stronger brain activity, suggesting that exercise levels may influence the magnitude of the brain’s memory-related response.
Many different strategies and techniques exist to help maintain or improve a person’s memory. Often, many of these methods emphasize keeping the brain active.

These brain-training activities often focus on stimulating specific regions of the brain involved in memory, such as the hippocampus. In particular, the hippocampus plays an important role in memory consolidation, the process by which newly formed memories are strengthened into long-term memories.

Previously, neuroscientists have documented “ripples” of brain activity relevant to memory in mice and rats. However, they had been unable to confirm this link in humans.

Now, a new study, published in Brain Communications, suggests that brief sessions of physical exercise could alter human brain activity, triggering waves of ‘ripples’ that may support the brain to process and store information more effectively.

These findings provide some of the first direct evidence explaining how exercise benefits cognition in humans at the neural level.

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