Daily Mail

How hitting the gym gives your memory a lift

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

GOING to the gym can not only keep your body in shape but can boost memory as well, researcher­s have found.

In an experiment, people who learnt some informatio­n were more likely to retain it after a strenuous workout.

But the benefits only happened if the exercise was undertaken several hours after the learning rather than immediatel­y.

It seems that exercising produces chemicals in the brain that help ‘fix’ memories in place, as long as we have had some time to mull them over first.

Dutch researcher­s found that people who exercised four hours after learning some- thing retained the informatio­n better two days later than those who exercised either straight after studying or not at all.

Professor Guillen Fernandez, from Radboud University Medical Centre in the Netherland­s, said: ‘We can improve memory consolidat­ion by doing sports after learning.

‘Our results suggest that appropriat­ely timed physical exercise can improve long-term memory and highlight the potential of exercise in educationa­l and clinical settings.’ The effects of a single session of physical exercise was tested after 72 participan­ts were asked to try to retain newly learnt informatio­n.

The group was then randomly split into three groups, who either exercised immediatel­y, after four hours, or not at all.

Those made to do a workout spent 35 minutes on an exercise bike set to a high intensity level.

Two days later, their brains were scanned using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during a test to see how much of the informatio­n they remembered.

The resulting brain images showed that exercise after a time delay was linked to more precise representa­tions in the hippoc- ampus, an area important to learning and memory, when an individual answered a question correctly.

It is not yet clear exactly how or why delayed exercise has this effect on memory, but earlier studies of laboratory animals hint that chemicals occurring naturally in the body, known as catecholam­ines, can help improve memory.

One way to boost catecholam­ines is through physical exercise.

Professor Fernandez, whose findings were published in the journal Current Biology, said they will now carry out further studies to find out in more detail the influence that exercise has on learning.

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