Neuroplasticity and Human Athletic Performance


It is all in your head?

The future is upon us and my crystal ball prediction for 2009 is that neuroplasticity (the ability of the brain to change) will gain popularity and for good reasons.

I find the science in this area amazing. Just a few years ago we thought that the brain would not change and now we know this is not true at all. The brain actually has an amazing ability to adapt and change (just like everything in human physiology). Most probably seen the PBS special “The Brain Fitness Program” which is fantastic.

The key to this idea is that learning new movements can have a huge effect on neuroplasticity. While hardcore research studies in this area are a bit lacking currently, there is enough data to show that when we learn movements there are concrete changes in the brain. The keys to enhanced athletic performance are findings ways to harness this neuroplasticity as the brain and nervous system control movement. The flip side is also true, for optimal health, we need to learn more athletic movements and challenge the brain in new ways.

Survival vs Performance
The human body is wired for survival instead of performance. This really bums me out personally, but once we realize this we can optimize it for survival and see an increase in performance! I have a whole presentation I did at the Z Health Master Trainer Eval in California recently on this topic. The short version is that we need to first look how we get information.

Primarily it is from
1) Eyes (visual and eye muscle movements)
2) Vestibular (inner ear “balance”)
3) Proprioceptive (info from the joints)

In order to optimize the body for performance (and pain reduction), we need to optimize each one of these systems. This is what I really love about the Z Health system, as it works to optimze each system and then combine them in a meaningful way. The result is superior athletic performance for virtually ANYONE.Everyone can learn to move more athletically and do things that they thought were not possible with the correct approach.

Below is a great article in Outside magzine on neuroplasticity. While I don’t agree with their exercises and would do it a different way; there is some great information.

Timeto exercise your mind AND body! See these related posts

Movement and Brain Deterioration? New Study

Stroke of Insight

Z Health S Phase Wrap Up

Z Health Level 4 Wrap Up and Good vs Bad Calories

Neuroscience Research Updates for October

Z Health and Biomechanical vs Neurological Approach

Total Life Fitness
Clear Your Head
Wellness 2009 from

Outside Magazine, January 2009
By Nick Heil

 

 

Brain training is suddenly big business. But can you get smarter without geriatric video games or wildly expensive lab tests? As our Lab Rat learned, yes.

The mental calisthenics were pretty simple at first: Could I pick up an envelope off the floor? Did I know where I was? Then came the stumper: What day was it? “Wednesday … wait a minute.” I glanced around the room for clues. Nothing. “It’s Tuesday. No, Monday!” I blurted to Tonya Kydland, a psychologist who works at Cognitive Fitness and Innovative Therapies (CFIT), a brain-fitness facility in a leafy section of Santa Barbara, California. Kydland nodded and, wearing a serious expression, jotted something in her notebook.

 

TAKE ACTION: Sharpen Up
Think you don’t need to work your noggin? Try this simple test: Have a friend read two random four-digit sequences to you (for instance, 5-3-8-9 and 2-5-3-8). As soon as they finish, repeat the numbers out loud, but in reverse order (9-8-3-5 and 8-3-5-2). Next, try it with two six-digit sequences, then two eight-digit sequences. If you failed to nail it, your short-term memory could use work. Try any (or all) of the following brain-building tools—which also promote long-term mental health—20 minutes a day, three times a week.1. CogniFit (cognifit.com). Their MindFit DVDs are loaded with brain-benders such as the Stroop Test, which trains reaction time and memory. The program customizes difficulty levels according to each user’s ability and has been shown to improve everything from general health to driving.
2. HappyNeuron (happy-neuron.com). These online entertainment-oriented games improve attention, language, and memory. Try “Heraldry,” which requires you to memorize various coats of arms.
3. Nintendo Brain Age (brainage.com). This game for the pocket-size Nintendo DS features numerous brain-building challenges, from simple math problems to mega-popular games like Sudoku.
4. Six-string guitar. Buy a beater on eBay and commit yourself to practicing three times a week. And play scales, not just the three chords you need to hack through “Free Fallin’. ” You’ll improve your memory, keep your mind in top shape—and impress at the next cookout.

 

CFIT is a new kind of mental-health outfit. Unlike the exploding number of commercial enterprises that purport to sharpen the mind using various electronic games and gizmos, CFIT addresses the whole picture: physical fitness, diet, mental activities, personal relationships, and medical history. “The idea here is to provide a thorough baseline assessment, then set you up on a program that will optimize your lifestyle to promote cognitive hea
lth,” says Ken Kosik, CFIT’s founder and a professor of neuroscience research at the University of California at Santa Barbara. In other words, CFIT is an everyman’s brain gym: You pay an annual membership fee of about $4,000 and make twice-weekly visits to the place, à la Equinox.

Brain fitness has become big business over the past few years. Cerebral-exercise computer games from companies like CogniFit and HappyNeuron generated $80 million in 2007, up from $2 million just three years earlier. An increasing number of high-end labs, such as Los Angeles–based Elite Sports Performance, help wealthy clients tweak attention-honing brain waves using EEGs and other state-of-the-art technology. CFIT, which is scheduled to be fully open for business by late 2008, offers something entirely different: an accessible, one-stop mind shop that promises to transcend the realm of the wonky and geriatric. For now, half of CFIT’s pilot group consists of retirees with looming cognitive trouble—the most ready and willing clients of the brain-training world—but Kosik’s vision is far bigger.

“I can see this sort of facility all over the country, for all kinds of people,” he says. (There’s talk of opening a second CFIT facility in San Diego, with more on the horizon.) “The time to focus on brain health is when there is no disease at all.”

Until about 15 years ago, many experts believed the brain was hardwired, and that once mental deterioration set in, it was irreversible. But recent neuroscience research has convinced the scientific community that the brain is malleable into old age. This principle, called neuroplasticity, has neurologists racing to tweak the mind in order to improve sports and job performance—and even stave off or reverse problems like Alz­heimer’s and Parkinson’s. CFIT aims to prevent these illnesses, but also to teach people how to maintain their intelligence and mindfulness over the long term. And that pro­cess begins with the rest of the body. “People forget that the brain is an organ, like the heart and lungs,” Kosik says, “and that it benefits from exercise and sound nutrition.”

My first step was to come clean on how often I floss (only in that pre-dental-exam panic), whether I do drugs (uh—cough, cough—no), and how much red wine and chocolate I consume (plenty). Once the staff reviewed my general health, it was time for a little mind fitness. The exercises—involving a stationary machine called the NuStep, a cross between an elliptical trainer and a stationary bike, and a widescreen TV set up with Nintendo’s Wii—were pretty basic at first. I experienced minor guilt pangs when, during a round of Wii boxing, I knocked out CFIT’s petite director, Hether Briggs (well, her avatar, anyway).

I got my comeuppance during the neuropsychological evaluation. I aced a few of the initial tests, then struggled to remember what day of the week it was. I could repeat from memory a string of eight numbers in reverse, but for some strange reason I messed up while attempting the same exercise with just four numbers. At the end of our hourlong session, Kydland asked me if I could recall the questions she’d asked when I first entered the room (Do I wear glasses or use a hearing aid? How old am I?). I drew a blank. And then I felt a sudden chill. Was this a warning sign of bigger problems?

Before I mustered the nerve to ask this question, CFIT set me up with some mental exercises on a brain-training computer program called MindFit that involved various memory and hand-eye-coordination games. At first, it was about as challenging as desktop solitaire, but it got progressively harder, until I was floundering again. Clearly, I could use some more brain push-ups.

The next day I sat down with the CFIT team to review my performance and discuss a long-term DIY program. This is the most innovative and impressive aspect of CFIT: They put all the components of mental fitness together in a practical, manageable training program. In lieu of cool-but-mostly-useless brain scans that might show my frontal lobe lighting up like a Christmas tree (or not), I got smart advice that I could take home and apply immediately.

To wit: My physical fitness is fine; keep it up, Kosik told me. He offered nutrition suggestions, like adopting the olive-oil-and-fruit-rich Mediterranean diet, which, according to a 2008 study in the British Medical Journal, promotes a 13 percent reduction in the occurrence of Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. Kosik also advocated a few supplements, like calcium, high-quality fish oil, and folate (a B vitamin that may prevent Alzheimer’s). My team prescribed three 20-minute CogniFit sessions a week; though, to be honest, I’m more likely to commit my time to other equally effective brain-benders, like the Sunday crossword puzzle, Sudoku, learning guitar, or tackling another language—anything, basically, that presents fresh challenges. “The better you get at a given activity,” said Kosik, “the less brain you use.”

One of the most compelling things I came away with is also the simplest: the vital importance of friendships. “A healthy and active social network is probably one of the best predictors of long-term mental health,” Kosik said.

“So I should keep playing soccer and going on ski trips with friends?”

“Absolutely,” he said.

Before I left, I had to ask Kydland about my quirky performance during the neuropsych tests. Was this, as I feared, a sign that I’m on the road to senility? “Don’t worry,” she said reassuringly. “You scored completely within the normal range. You just weren’t paying attention.”

TAKE ACTION:
Reprogram Your System
Know that feeling when you want to keel over at mile five on your run? That’s your brain playing mother hen. Sports scientists are realizing that everything from how fast you can run a 10K to how long you can bike at 20 mph is determined by the brain’s understanding of the body’s limits—a protective mechanism known as “anticipatory regulation.”
“Job number one for your brain during exercise is to prevent you from working yourself to death,” says Ross Tucker, an exercise physiologist and consultant to the Sports Science Institute of South Africa. This subconscious safety net is usually more conservative than it needs to be, unless you’re an elite athlete. And research suggests that amateurs can boost their performance with workouts that safely recalibrate the brain’s protective mechanism. Here’s how.

1. Wear a stopwatch or heart-rate monitor and warm up with ten minutes of easy swimming, jogging, or pedaling. Increase your effort to the fastest speed you think you can sustain for 20 minutes. But don’t look at your watch—hold your pace until you think you’re near exhaustion. Stop and cool down.

2. Jot down your average pace (for example, 7:30 mile for a run) and the amount of time you held that pace (don’t feel bad when it’s not even close to 20 minutes). Repeat the workout once a week and try to sustain the same pace for a slightly longer duration each time. Again, don’t look at the clock—push yourself by feel. Expect some improvement in your second try at the workout—not because you’re more fit, but because your brain is comfortable letting you work harder.

3. In each subsequent workout, you should be able to go farther, thanks to improving fitness and a slightly less conservative brain.

—MATT FITZGERALD
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