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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 麻豆传媒.We all know exercise is good for us, but that still leaves plenty of questions. How much exercise? Who benefits the most? And when in our lives? New research led by Pitt psychologists pools data from dozens of studies to answer these questions and shows that older adults may be able to prevent declines in a certain kind of memory by sticking to regular exercise.
鈥淓veryone always asks, 鈥楬ow much should I be exercising? What鈥檚 the bare minimum to see improvement?鈥欌 said lead author , a clinical and biological health psychology PhD student in the Kenneth P. Dietrich 麻豆传媒 of Arts and Sciences. 鈥淔rom our study, it seems like exercising about three times a week for at least four months is how much you need to reap the benefits in episodic memory.鈥
Episodic memory is the kind that deals with events that happened to you in the past. It鈥檚 also one of the first to decline with age. 鈥淚 usually like to talk about the first time you got behind the wheel of a car,鈥 said Aghjayan. 鈥淪o you might remember where you were, how old you were, who was in the passenger seat explaining things to you, that feeling of excitement.鈥
Exercise that gets the heart pumping has shown promise in increasing brain health, and experiments in mice show that it improves memory 鈥 but studies looking at the same link in humans have come out mixed.
Seeking clarity in the muddy waters of the scientific literature, the team pored over 1,279 studies, eventually narrowing them down to just 36 that met specific criteria. Then they used specialized software and no small number of Excel spreadsheets to transform the data into a form where the different studies could be directly compared.
That work paid off when they found that pooling together those 36 studies was enough to show that for older adults, exercise can indeed benefit their memory.
The team, including Aghjayan鈥檚 advisor in the Department of Psychology and other researchers from Pitt, Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Iowa, today in the journal Communications Medicine.
Past analyses looking at connections between exercise and memory didn鈥檛 find one, but Aghjayan and her team took several extra steps to give them the best chance of finding a link if one did exist. They limited their search to particular groups and age brackets, as well as a specific kind of rigorous experimental setup. Another key was focusing specifically on episodic memory, which is supported by a part of the brain that鈥檚 known to benefit from exercise.
鈥淲hen we combine and merge all this data, it allows us to examine almost 3,000 participants,鈥 Aghjayan said. 鈥淓ach individual study is very important: They all contribute to science in a meaningful way.鈥 Those studies, however, may fail to find patterns that actually exist because of a lack of resources to run a big enough experiment. Each experiment alone couldn鈥檛 find a link between exercise and memory 鈥 it took looking at the whole body of research to bring the pattern into focus.
With that much larger pool of participants, the team was able to not just show a link between exercise and episodic memory, but to answer more specific questions about who benefits and how.
鈥淲e found that there were greater improvements in memory among those who are age 55 to 68 years compared to those who are 69 to 85 years old 鈥 so intervening earlier is better,鈥 Aghjayan said. The team also found the greatest effects of exercise in those who hadn鈥檛 yet experienced any cognitive decline, and in studies where participants exercised consistently several times a week.
There are still questions left to be answered. The team鈥檚 analysis couldn鈥檛 answer how the intensity of exercise affects the memory benefits, and there鈥檚 plenty to learn about the mechanism behind the link. But the implications for public health are clear: Exercise is an accessible way older adults can stave off memory declines, benefiting themselves, their caretakers and the health care system, Aghjayan said.
鈥淵ou just need a good pair of walking shoes, and you can get out there and move your body.鈥
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Photography by Aimee Obidzinski