beplay2網頁登錄 中國教育網 加入收藏 設為首頁

大腦老化竟有益?

http://en.jybest.cn    滬江網  2010-03-10  

特別提醒:科學填報誌願比取得好成績更加重要。考試結束了,盡快估分選大學、確定誌願吧。請點擊這裏,幫你解決!

  在大眾的觀念當中,大腦的不斷老化所伴隨著都應該是一些負麵的信息,如記憶力退化,反應遲鈍等等,而加州大學洛杉磯分校的某項研究發現事實並非如此,想了解其中的奧妙嗎?那就讓我們跟著Gary Small一起來了解吧!

  March 1, 2010 - MICHELLE TRUDEAU: I'm Michelle Trudeau. Just as in adolescence, there's good news and bad news about the brain in middle age, and ways researchers tell us to maintain good brain health. First, the bad news for us middle-agers.

  Dr. GARY SMALL (Director, UCLA Center on Aging): Reaction time is slower. It takes us longer to learn new information.

  TRUDEAU: That's research psychiatrist Gary Small, from UCLA.

  Dr. SMALL: Sometimes it takes us longer to retrieve information, so we have that tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon. That's typical of a middle-age brain.

  TRUDEAU: Any more bad news?

  Dr. SMALL: We're not so great at multi-tasking. We're quick, but we're sloppy. We make more errors when we're middle-aged.

  TRUDEAU: Is there any good news?

  Dr. SMALL: Complex reasoning is very good when we get older, as we age.

  TRUDEAU: Small explains that myelination, the insulation wrapped around each nerve cell that increases conductivity, reaches its maximum in middle age.

  Dr. SMALL: So that means that the neural circuits fire more rapidly, so you're going from dial-up to DSL.

  TRUDEAU: And Small adds empathy to our plus column.

  Dr. SMALL: If you design an experiment, and you present several options for a young person, they're more likely to choose a more narcissistic option than one that tends to take into account the other person's interest and point of view than, say, a middle-age or older person would.

  TRUDEAU: One of the great discoveries from recent neuroscience research is that our brains are always changing, always developing, even able to grow new brain cells.

  In a recent study, one he calls "Your Brain on Google," Gary Small trained healthy, middle-aged folks who were novices on the computer to do Google searches. They practiced searching online an hour a day for a week, and then came back into the lab for brain scans. The scans showed significant increases in brain activity in the areas that control memory and decision-making.

  Dr. SMALL: One interpretation of that is that with practice, very quickly, an older brain can alter its neural circuitry, can strengthen those neural circuits controlling working memory, controlling decision-making areas of the brain.

  TRUDEAU: Research by neuroscientist Art Kramer, at the University of Illinois, demonstrates the plasticity, or the ability to grow and change, of the aging brain. In his studies on physical exercise, memory improves with aerobic, treadmill training.

  Dr. ART KRAMER (Neuroscientist, University of Illinois): So what we find is that over a six-month to a one-year period, at three days a week, working up to an hour a day, that people improve in various aspects of both short-term and long-term memory.

  TRUDEAU: And people who exercised had larger hippocampi, a critical memory center. Other brain areas, too central for decision-making, planning and multi-tasking were also larger, larger than when they began the aerobic exercise program.

  Dr. KRAMER: There are number of regions that on MRI scans tend to show not just stability, but increases as a function of exercise in middle-age and older brains.

  TRUDEAU: And these scientists are walking the walk. For all you baby boomers out there with middle-aged brains, heres what Dr. Kramer, age 56 and next, Dr. Small, age 58, do to keep their own brains healthy.

  Dr. KRAMER: Before this interview, I was over at the gym, and I was riding a stationary bike and reading a few newspapers. And I was also lifting weights.

  Dr. SMALL: And I'll start out in the New York Times, and I'll do "KenKen." And then either Ill solve it, or I get to the point where I screwed it up. And then I move on to the crossword. That's my typical day.

  For NPR News, I'm Michelle Trudeau.

如有相關問題,可撥打免費谘詢熱線: 010-58443520

考試培訓小助手

本科留學qq:436560382

研究生留學qq:437946603

免責聲明:

① 凡本站注明“稿件來源:beplay2網頁登錄”的所有文字、圖片和音視頻稿件,版權均屬本網所有,任何媒體、網站或個人未經本網協議授權不得轉載、鏈接、轉貼或以其他方式複製發表。已經本站協議授權的媒體、網站,在下載使用時必須注明“稿件來源:beplay2網頁登錄”,違者本站將依法追究責任。

② 本站注明稿件來源為其他媒體的文/圖等稿件均為轉載稿,本站轉載出於非商業性的教育和科研之目的,並不意味著讚同其觀點或證實其內容的真實性。如轉載稿涉及版權等問題,請作者在兩周內速來電或來函聯係。

內容推薦

外語電子周刊

推薦閱讀
eol.cn簡介| 聯係方式| 網站聲明| 京ICP證140769號| 京ICP備12045350號| 京公網安備 11010802020236號
版權所有 北京中教雙元科技集團有限公司 EOL Corporation
Mail to: webmaster@eol.cn