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Attention,
couch potatoes! Walking boosts brain
connectivity, function
CHAMPAIGN, lll. — A group of “professional
couch potatoes,” as one researcher described
them, has proven that even moderate exercise
– in this case walking at one’s own pace for
40 minutes three times a week – can enhance
the connectivity of important brain
circuits, combat declines in brain function
associated with aging and increase
performance on cognitive tasks.
Moderate walking three times per week for a
year increased brain connectivity and brain
function in older adults, the researchers
found.
The study, in Frontiers in Aging
Neuroscience, followed 65 adults, aged 59 to
80, who joined a walking group or stretching
and toning group for a year. All of the
participants were sedentary before the
study, reporting less than two episodes of
physical activity lasting 30 minutes or more
in the previous six months. The researchers
also measured brain activity in 32 younger
(18- to 35-year-old) adults.
Rather than focusing on specific brain
structures, the study looked at activity in
brain regions that function together as
networks.
“Almost nothing in the brain gets done by
one area – it’s more of a circuit,” said
University of Illinois psychology professor
and Beckman
Institute Director
Art Kramer, who led the study with kinesiology
and community health professor
Edward McAuley and doctoral student Michelle
Voss.
“These networks can become more or less
connected. In general, as we get older, they
become less connected, so we were interested
in the effects of fitness on connectivity of
brain networks that show the most
dysfunction with age.”
Neuroscientists have identified several
distinct brain circuits. Perhaps the most
intriguing is the default mode network (DMN),
which dominates brain activity when a person
is least engaged with the outside world –
either passively observing something or
simply daydreaming.
Previous studies found that a loss of
coordination in the DMN is a common symptom
of aging and in extreme cases can be a
marker of disease, Voss said.
“For example, people with Alzheimer’s
disease tend to have less activity in the
default mode network and they tend to have
less connectivity,” she said. Low
connectivity means that the different parts
of the circuit are not operating in sync.
Like poorly trained athletes on a rowing
team, the brain regions that make up the
circuit lack coordination and so do not
function at optimal efficiency or speed,
Voss said.
In a healthy young brain, activity in the
DMN quickly diminishes when a person engages
in an activity that requires focus on the
external environment. Older people, people
with Alzheimer’s disease and those who are
schizophrenic have more difficulty
“down-regulating” the DMN so that other
brain networks can come to the fore, Kramer
said.
A recent study by Kramer, Voss and their
colleagues found that older adults who are
more fit tend to have better connectivity in
specific regions of the DMN than their
sedentary peers. Those with more
connectivity in the DMN also tend to be
better at planning, prioritizing,
strategizing and multi-tasking.
The new study used functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) to determine
whether aerobic activity increased
connectivity in the DMN or other brain
networks. The researchers measured
participants’ brain connectivity and
performance on cognitive tasks at the
beginning of the study, at six months and
after a year of either walking or toning and
stretching.
At the end of the year, DMN connectivity was
significantly improved in the brains of the
older walkers, but not in the stretching and
toning group, the researchers report.
The walkers also had increased connectivity
in parts of another brain circuit (the
fronto-executive network, which aids in the
performance of complex tasks) and they did
significantly better on cognitive tests than
their toning and stretching peers.
Previous studies have found that aerobic
exercise can enhance the function of
specific brain structures, Kramer said. This
study shows that even moderate aerobic
exercise also improves the coordination of
important brain networks.
“The higher the connectivity, the better the
performance on some of these cognitive
tasks, especially the ones we call executive
control tasks – things like planning,
scheduling, dealing with ambiguity, working
memory and multitasking,” Kramer said. These
are the very skills that tend to decline
with aging, he said.
This study was supported by the National
Institute on Aging at the National
Institutes of Health.