On multiple occasions, readers of my learning and memory
blog posts asked me what they could do to improve their working memory. This is
an important and very practical question. Working memory affects all aspects of
life success: personal, educational, and professional. I usually tell them to
practice attentiveness and concentration. But I probably should tell them to
adapt a healthier lifestyle.
For over a decade a variety of studies have implicated
lifestyle in memory function. A rigorous new study confirms these results. An
Israeli research team studied 823 participants, aged 22-37 years, using brain
scans taken during a difficult memory task, post-scan memory tests, and
numerous measures of health and lifestyle. The brain scans identified the brain
areas that particularly engage in working memory tasks, most important of which
were the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, parietal cortex, and anterior
cingulate cortex. These then served as a frame of reference to check for
correlations with health and lifestyle.
The key finding was a strong correlation between activity in
working-memory brain areas and health and lifestyle. With all behavior/health
variables considered together, the highest positive correlation occurred, in
order, with fluid intelligence, reading, spatial orientation, picture
vocabulary, several memory tests, and attentiveness.
They observed an opposite correlation for such specific
life-style indicators as large body mass index and a variety of unwise
lifestyles such as binge drinking, and regular smoking. Health variables that
correlated negatively with working-memory brain areas included high body-mass
index, high blood pressure, poor glucose regulation.
The healthy lifestyle variables also correlated with other
cognitive functions, such as fluid intelligence, reading/language skills,
visuospatial orientation, sustained attention, mental flexibility and emotional
intelligence, and physical endurance. Thus, the working memory benefit from
healthy lifestyles seems to reflect a general improvement of brain function
that good health confers.
The principle confirmed here supports the underlying theme
of my recent e-book for seniors, which explained how memory serves a function
like a canary in the coal mine. Memory decline is a warning signal of a damaged
brain. That book explains the healthy life styles that people should be using
as they age in order to keep the brain healthy and prevent memory
deterioration. Changing lifestyle after the damage has already occurred may be
too late. The point is that young people with healthy lifestyles have better
brain function, and those lifestyles will help both body and brain to age well.
I recently published a book, “To
Tell the Truth: Save Us from Concealment, Half-truths, Misrepresentation, Spin,
and Fake News.” It is an inexpensive ($3.99), e-book now available at Amazon.
At Smashwords.com you can choose among several e-book formats, including pdf.
Sources:
Klemm, W. R. (2014). Improve
Your Memory for a Healthy Brain. Memory Is the Canary in Your Brain's Coal
Mine. https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/496252
Moser, D. A. et al. (2017). An integrated brain-behavior
model for working memory. Molecular Psychiatry. Doi: 10.1038/mp.2017.247
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