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运动对大脑的即时益处与长期保护作用

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    本文探讨了运动对大脑的即时益处与长期保护作用,强调运动如何改善情绪、增强注意力和记忆力,并对抗神经退行性疾病。文章结合神经科学研究与个人实验经历,展示运动对大脑结构和功能的深远影响。
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    What if I told you there was something that you can do right now that would have an immediate positive benefit for your brain, including your mood and your focus? And what if I told you that same thing could actually last a long time and protect your brain from different conditions like depression, Alzheimer's disease, or dementia? Would you do it? Yes, I am talking about the powerful effects of physical activity that is simply moving your body has immediate, long lasting, and protective benefits for your brain and that can last for the rest of your life. So what I want to do today is tell you a story about how I use my deep understanding of neuroscience, as a professor of neuroscience, to essentially do an experiment on myself in which I discovered the science underlying why exercise is the most transformative thing that you can do for your brain today.

    Now as a neuroscientist, I know that our brain, that is the thing in our head right now, that is the most complex structure known to humankind. But it is one thing to talk about the brain and it is another to see it. So here is a real preserved human brain and it is going to illustrate two key areas that we are going to talk about today. The first is the prefrontal cortex right behind your forehead, critical for things like decision making, focus, attention, and your personality. The second key area is located in the temporal lobe shown right here. You have two temporal lobes on your brain, the right and the left, and deep in the temporal lobe is a key structure, critical for your ability to form and retain new long term memories for facts and events. And that structure is called the hippocampus.

    I have always been fascinated with the hippocampus. How could it be that an event that lasts just a moment, say your first kiss, or the moment your first child was born, inform a memory that has changed your brain that lasts an entire lifetime? That's what I want to understand. I wanted to start and record the activity of individual brain cells in the hippocampus as subjects were forming new memories and essentially trying decode how those brief bursts of electrical activity, which is how neurons communicate with each other. How those brief bursts either allowed us to form a new memory or did not. And a few years ago I did something very unusual in science. As a full professor of neural science, I decided to completely switch my research program because I encountered something that was so amazing with the potential to change so many lives that I had to study it.

    I discovered and I experienced the brain changing effects of exercise. And I did it in a completely inadvertent way. I was actually at the height of all the memory work that I was doing. Data was pouring in. I was becoming known in my field for all of this memory work. And it should have been going great. It was scientifically. But when I stuck my head out of my lab door, I noticed something. I had no social life. I spent too much time listening to those brain cells in a dark room by myself. I didn't move my body at all. I had gained 25 pounds. And actually took me many years to realize it was actually miserable. And I shouldn't be miserable. And I went on a river rafting trip by myself because I had been social life. And I came back thinking, oh my God, I was the weakest person on that trip. And I came back with a mission. I said, I'm never going to feel like the weakest person on a river rafting trip again. And that's what made me go to the gym.

    And I focused my type A personality on going to all the exercise classes at the gym. I tried everything. I went to kickbox, dance, yoga, step class. And at first it was really hard. But what I noticed is that after every sweat-inducing workout that I tried, I had this great mood boost and this great energy boost. And that's what kept me going back to the gym. Well, I started feeling stronger. I started feeling better. I even lost that 25 pounds. And now fast forward a year and a half into this regular exercise program. And I noticed something that really made me sit up and take notes. I was sitting in my desk writing a research grant. And a thought went through my mind that had never gone through my mind before. And that thought was, gee, grant writing is going well today. And all the scientists always laugh when I say that. This grant writing never goes well. It is so hard. You're always pulling your hair out trying to come up with that million dollar winning idea. But I realized that the grant writing was going well because I was able to focus and maintain my attention for longer than I had before. And my long-term memory, what I was studying in my own lab seemed to be better in me.

    And that's when I put it together. Maybe all that exercise that had included and added to my life was changing my brain. Maybe I did an experiment on myself without even knowing it. So as a curious neuroscientist, I went to the literature to see what I could find about what we knew about the effects of exercise on the brain. And what I found was an exciting and a growing literature that was essentially showing everything that I noticed in myself. Better mood, better energy, better memory, better attention. And the more I learned, the more I realized how powerful exercise was, which eventually led me to the big decision to completely shift my research focus.

    And so now, after several years of really focusing on this question, I've come to the following conclusion. That exercise is the most transformative thing that you can do for your brain today for the following three reasons. Number one, it has immediate effects on your brain. A single workout that you do will immediately increase levels of neurotransmitters like dopamine, serotonin and noradrenaline. That is going to increase your mood right after that workout, exactly what I was feeling. My lab showed that a single workout can improve your ability to shift and focus attention. And that focus improvement will last for at least two hours. And finally, studies have shown that a single workout will improve your reaction times, which basically means that you are going to be faster at catching that cup of Starbucks that falls off the counter, which is very, very important.

    But these immediate effects are transient. They help you right after. What you have to do is do what I did, that is change your exercise regime, increase your cardio respiratory function to get the long lasting effects. And these effects are long lasting because exercise actually changes the brain's anatomy, physiology and function. Let's start with my favorite brain area, the hippocampus. The hippocampus or exercise actually produces brand new brain cells, new brain cells in the hippocampus that actually increase its volume as well as improve your long-term memory. And that including in you and me. Number two, the most common finding in neuroscience studies, looking at the effects of exercise, long-term exercise is improved attention function dependent on your prefrontal cortex. You not only get better focus and attention, but the volume of the hippocampus increases as well. And finally, you not only get immediate effects of mood with exercise, but those last for a long time so you get long-lasting increases in those good mood neurotransmitters.

    But really, the most transformative thing that exercise will do is its protective effects on your brain. Here you can think about the brain like a muscle. The more you're working out, the bigger and stronger your hippocampus and prefrontal cortex gets. Why is that important? Because the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus are the two areas that are most susceptible to neurodegenerative diseases and normal cognitive decline in aging. So with increased exercise over your lifetime, you're not going to cure dementia or Alzheimer's disease. But what you're going to do is you're going to create the strongest, biggest hippocampus in prefrontal cortex. So it takes longer for these diseases to actually have an effect. You can think of exercise, therefore, as a supercharged 401k for your brain. And it's even better because it's free.

    So this is a point in the talk where everybody says, that sounds so interesting, Wendy. But I really only want to know one thing. And that is just tell me the minimum amount of exercise I need to get all these changes. And so I'm going to tell you the answer to that question. First, good news. You don't have to become a triathlete to get these effects. The rule of thumb is you want to get three to four times a week exercise, minimum 30 minutes an exercise session. And you want to get aerobic exercise in. That is, get your heart rate up. And the good news is you don't have to go to the gym to get a very expensive gym membership. Get an extra walk around the block in your power walk. You see stairs? Take stairs. And power vacuuming can be as good as the aerobics class that you are going to take at the gym.

    I have gone from memory pioneer to exercise explorer. From going into the innermost workings of the brain to try to understand how exercise can improve our brain function. And my goal in my lab right now is to go beyond that rule of thumb that I just gave you three to four times a week, 30 minutes. I want to understand the optimum exercise prescription for you at your age, at your fitness level, for your genetic background to maximize the effects of exercise today and also to improve your brain and protect your brain the best for the rest of your life. But it is one thing to talk about exercise and it is another to do it. So I am going to invoke my power as a certified exercise instructor to ask you all to stand up. We are going to do just one minute of exercise. Call a response, just do what I do, say what I say and make sure you don't punch your neighbor. Okay? Music. 5, 6, 7, 8. It is right left, right left. What I say, I am strong now. Let's hear you. I am strong now. Ladies, I am Wonder Woman strong. Let's hear you. I am the new fighter of the strong. New move uppercut, right and left. I am inspired now. You say it. I am the inspired now. I am the inspired now. Okay, good job. Thank you. I want to leave you with one last thought and that is bringing exercise in your life will not only give you a happier and more protective life today, but it will protect your brain from incurable diseases and in this way it will change the trajectory of your life for the better. Thank you very much. Thank you.

部分单词释义

单词解释英文单词解释
  • attention

    名词注意,注意力; 照料,关怀; 殷勤

    int.[口令]立正

    1. 注意;留心;专注
    If you give someone or something your attention, you look at it, listen to it, or think about it carefully.

    e.g. You have my undivided attention...
    我专心听你所讲。
    e.g. Later he turned his attention to the desperate state of housing in the province.
    其后,他将注意力转向了该省形势严峻的住房问题。

    2. (尤指大众的)注意力,关注
    Attention is great interest that is shown in someone or something, particularly by the general public.

    e.g. Volume Two, subtitled 'The Lawyers', will also attract considerable attention...
    副标题为“律师”的第二册也将获得广泛关注。
    e.g. The conference may help to focus attention on the economy.
    此次会议可能有助于将关注焦点放在经济上。

    3. 保养;照料;照顾
    If someone or something is getting attention, they are being dealt with or cared for.

    e.g. Each year more than two million household injuries need medical attention.
    每年有超过200万起家中受伤事件需要医疗处理。
    e.g. ...a demanding baby who seems to want attention 24 hours a day.
    好像一天24小时都要人照看的难缠的宝宝

    4. (尤指令人讨厌的)关注,殷勤
    You can refer to someone's efforts to help you, or the interest they show in you, as their attentions, especially if you dislike or disapprove of them.

    e.g. The only way to escape the unwanted attentions of the local men was not to go out...
    避免被当地人指指点点的唯一办法就是闭门不出。
    e.g. The meeting was held away from the attentions of the media...
    会议的举行避开了媒体的关注。

    5. 注意;注意力
    If you bring something to someone's attention or draw their attention to it, you tell them about it or make them notice it.

    e.g. If we don't keep bringing this to the attention of the people, nothing will be done...
    如果我们无法让群众一直关注此事,那将一事无成。
    e.g. We conclude by drawing attention to the issues around which the debate should focus.
    我们作总结时着重提到了辩论应该关注的一些问题。

    6. (突然)吸引…的注意
    If someone or something attracts your attention or catches your attention, you suddenly notice them.

    e.g. A faint aroma of coffee attracted his attention...
    淡淡的咖啡香味一下子吸引了他。
    e.g. He sat at one of the round tables and tried to attract her attention.
    他坐在其中一张圆桌旁边,想引起她的注意。

    7. 关心/不关心;注意/不注意
    If you pay attention to someone, you watch them, listen to them, or take notice of them. If you pay no attention to someone, you behave as if you are not aware of them or as if they are not important.

    e.g. More than ever before, the food industry is paying attention to young consumers...
    食品工业比以往任何时候都更加关注年轻消费者。
    e.g. Other people walk along the beach at night, so I didn't pay any attention at first...
    入夜后还有人在沙滩上散步,起先我并没注意到。

    8. 立正
    When people stand to attention or stand at attention, they stand straight with their feet together and their arms at their sides.

    e.g. Soldiers in full combat gear stood at attention...
    全副武装的士兵们立正站着。
    e.g. The waiters stood to attention with napkins folded over their arms.
    服务员笔直站立着,餐巾折叠着放在他们的手臂上。

  • experiment

    名词尝试; 实验,试验

    不及物动词尝试; 做实验,进行试验

    The noun is pronounced /?k'sper?m?nt/. The verb is pronounced /?k'sper?ment/. 名词读作 /?k'sper?m?nt/。动词读作 /?k'sper?ment/。
  • aerobic

    形容词需氧的,有氧的; 有氧健身的,增氧健身法

    1. 有氧健身的
    Aerobic activity exercises and strengthens your heart and lungs.

    e.g. Aerobic exercise gets the heart pumping and helps you to burn up the fat.
    有氧运动加速心脏跳动,有助于消耗更多脂肪。

  • protective

    形容词保护的,防护的; 保护贸易的

    1. 保护的;防护的
    Protective means designed or intended to protect something or someone from harm.

    e.g. Protective gloves reduce the absorption of chemicals through the skin...
    防护手套可以减少皮肤对化学物质的吸收。
    e.g. Protective measures are necessary if the city's monuments are to be preserved.
    要保存城市古迹必须采取一些维护性措施。

    2. 呵护的;有保护欲的
    If someone is protective towards you, they look after you and show a strong desire to keep you safe.

    e.g. He is very protective towards his mother...
    他对他的母亲呵护备至。
    e.g. Glynis was beside her, putting a protective arm around her shoulders.
    格莉妮丝在她身边,呵护地用胳膊搂住她的肩膀。

    protectively
    Simon drove me to the airport and protectively told me to look after myself.
    西蒙开车送我到机场,并嘱咐我照顾好自己。
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