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今すぐ体を動かそう!―脳に良い変化をもたらす運動の効果(TED)

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ウェンディー・スズキ: 脳に良い変化をもたらす運動の効果

ウェンディー・スズキ: 脳に良い変化をもたらす運動の効果

脳の働きを劇的に変化させる為に、今あなたが出来ることとは何でしょうか?「運動することです!」そう断言するのは、神経科学者ウェンディー・スズキです。運動することが、気分も記憶力も向上させる科学的根拠を説明するスズキのトークを聞いて、運動をする気を起こしてみましょう(約13分)。

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身体運動が生むパワフルな効果

あなたは普段、どれくらい運動をしているでしょうか。運動をすることによって、体だけでなく脳にも素晴らしい変化が起きることを知ったら、あなたはどう思いますか?

身体をただ動かすだけで、あなたの脳に即効的で長続きし、保護的な影響を与えます。その効果は生涯にわたり持続することも可能です。

Simply moving your body, has immediate, long-lasting and protective benefits for your brain. And that can last for the rest of your life.

なぜ、運動が体だけではなく脳にも効果があるのか。その理由を、神経科学者であるウェンディー・スズキが自ら体験した経験をもとに説明しましょう。

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ウェンディー・スズキが運動効果に気が付いたある出来事

神経科学者であるウェンディー・スズキは、脳のなかにある海馬と呼ばれる部位が、どのような働きをするのかについて研究していた神経科学者でした。

たった1分程度の出来事――、例えばあなたの最初のキスや、最初の子供が生まれた瞬間等が、どのようにして一生の間続く脳の変化をもたらす記憶を形作るのでしょう。私が理解したいのがその点です。

How could it be that an event that lasts just a moment, say, your first kiss, or the moment your first child was born, can form a memory that has changed your brain, that lasts an entire lifetime? That’s what I want to understand.

海馬のことを研究していたウェンディー・スズキは、その分野では名の知れたちょっとした有名人でした。しかし研究に没頭した結果、体を動かさなかったのも重なり体重が11kgも増えてしまっていたのです。これでは良くないと、勇んで川下りの旅に出たウェンディー・スズキでしたが、その帰り道では参加者の中で一番体力が無かったことに落ち込んでいました。

そこから発奮したウェンディー・スズキは、ジムに通うようになります。生真面目なA型人間という自ら性格を利用してジムのプログラムに全て参加した結果、落ちていた体力は向上して、11kg増えていた体重も減りました。しかし、驚くべき変化はそれだけではありませんでした。研究室で仕事をしていたウェンディー・スズキは、あることに気が付くのです。

机に座り、研究費の申請を書いていると、ある考えが頭をよぎったのです。今まで頭に浮かんだことが一度もないことでした。その考えとは、「今日は研究費申請を書くのが うまくいっている」。

そう言うといつも 科学者はみんな笑うの。研究費の申請を書くのは、決してうまくいかないからです。

I was sitting at my desk, writing a research grant, and a thought went through my mind that had never gone through my mind before. And that thought was, “Gee, grant-writing is going well today.”

yeah, all the scientists always laugh when I say that, because grant-writing never goes well.

これまでずっと、助成金をもらえるアイデアを考えるのに頭を悩ませていたのに、スムーズに申請書が書けていたのです。変化はそれだけではありませんでした。

生活に取り入れた運動が脳に変化を与えた

ほかにも、ウェンディー・スズキは以前よりも自分の集中力が増して、記憶力が高まっていることに気が付きます。この出来事がきっかけで、彼女は運動が脳に与える影響について書かれた文献を読むようになります。

そこで発見したことは、大変に興味深く、そして日々発表される研究結果が 私自身も気付いたことを裏付けていることでした。

気分の改善、やる気の増強、記憶力や集中力の増強――。知れば知るほど、運動のパワフルな効果に気付きました。

And what I found was an exciting and a growing literature that was essentially showing everything that I noticed in myself.

Better mood, better energy, better memory, better attention. And the more I learned, the more I realized how powerful exercise was.

調べれば調べるほどに、脳と運動の関係性について興味を惹かれたウェンディー・スズキは、長年携わっていた研究課題を離れます。そして、そこから大きく方向転換をして、運動と脳の関係性についての研究を行うようになりました。

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運動の効果と、必要最低限の運動量について

運動することによってどんな変化が起きるのでしょうか。具体的には、3つの変化が脳に起きます。

  1. 短期間の運動:気分の高揚と集中力の増加
  2. 長期間の運動:注意機能の改善
  3. 脳に対する保護効果が高まる

まず(1)ですが、運動することにより脳内物質が分泌されて、気分が高揚して集中力が高まることがわかっています。その効果は最低2時間継続します。さらに運動を長期的に行うことにより、運動習慣が変わり、心肺機能も高まります。

(2)は、運動を続けることによって注意力と集中力が良くなるだけではなく、海馬の容積も増えます。これが(3)に繋がり、長期間の運動をすることによって、体と一緒に脳も鍛えられるのです。

生涯にわたる運動量が増えても認知症やアルツハイマー病は治せませんが、一番大きくて丈夫な海馬と前頭前皮質を作り上げ、これらの病いの進行が見られるまでの時間を引き延ばします。

So with increased exercise over your lifetime, you’re not going to cure dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, but what you’re going to do is you’re going to create the strongest, biggest hippocampus and prefrontal cortex so it takes longer for these diseases to actually have an effect.

では、一体どれくらいの運動を行えばいいのでしょうか。

週に3~4回ぐらいのペースを目安に、一回あたり最低限30分の運動量、有酸素運動を含めましょう。

要するに、心拍数を増やしてください。

The rule of thumb is you want to get three to four times a week exercise minimum 30 minutes an exercise session, and you want to get aerobic exercise in.

That is, get your heart rate up.

例えば、エレベーターではなく階段を使う。隣の駅まで早足で歩くなど、そうしたことで効果が得られるということですね。

歩く
アイデアは足から!―もっと創造的になりたいなら散歩に出よう(TED)【TED 紹介・解説】マリリー・オペッゾ: もっと創造的になりたいなら散歩に出よう/歩くことがいかに大切か。行動や学習を科学的に研究しているマリリー・オペッゾが楽しく軽快に話します(約5分半)。そんなトークの詳細を紹介します。...
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まとめ:運動は不治の病から守る備えになる

話を聞いて納得して終わる人と、すぐに体を動かす人とでは、当然ながらこれからの生活に大きな変化が生まれます。運動することはなにも難しいことではありません。あなたも将来の体と脳の健康のために、今日から体を動かしてみませんか?

【自宅で筋トレ】世界で一番楽な筋トレ&有酸素運動

無理をすることはありません。長く続けることで、気が付いた時にはきっとあなたの脳と体と大きく変わっていることでしょう。

科学
10分で意識改革!TEDのおすすめ動画10選【脳科学編】【TED 紹介・解説】TEDは4000を超える膨大な数の動画があります。しかし慣れないうちは、動画の探し方や視聴のコツが分かりませんよね。この記事では、見ると誰かに言いたくなるTEDのおすすめ動画10選【脳科学編】を、あらすじと一緒に紹介します。...

英語全文

What if I told you there was something that you can do right now that would have an immediate, positive benefit for your brain including your mood and your focus? And what if I told you that same thing could actually last a long time and protect your brain from different conditions like depression, Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. Would you do it? Yes!

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I am talking about the powerful effects of physical activity. Simply moving your body, has immediate, long-lasting and protective benefits for your brain. And that can last for the rest of your life. So what I want to do today is tell you a story about how I used my deep understanding of neuroscience, as a professor of neuroscience, to essentially do an experiment on myself in which I discovered the science underlying why exercise is the most transformative thing that you can do for your brain today. Now, as a neuroscientist, I know that our brains, that is the thing in our head right now, that is the most complex structure known to humankind. But it’s one thing to talk about the brain, and it’s another to see it.

So here is a real preserved human brain. And it’s going to illustrate two key areas that we are going to talk about today. The first is the prefrontal cortex, right behind your forehead, critical for things like decision-making, focus, attention and your personality. The second key area is located in the temporal lobe, shown right here. You have two temporal lobes in your brain, the right and the left, and deep in the temporal lobe is a key structure critical for your ability to form and retain new long-term memories for facts and events. And that structure is called the hippocampus. So I’ve always been fascinated with the hippocampus. How could it be that an event that lasts just a moment, say, your first kiss, or the moment your first child was born, can form a memory that has changed your brain, that lasts an entire lifetime? That’s what I want to understand. I wanted to start and record the activity of individual brain cells in the hippocampus as subjects were forming new memories. And essentially try and decode how those brief bursts of electrical activity, which is how neurons communicate with each other, how those brief bursts either allowed us to form a new memory, or did not.

But a few years ago, I did something very unusual in science. As a full professor of neural science, I decided to completely switch my research program. Because I encountered something that was so amazing, with the potential to change so many lives that I had to study it. I discovered and I experienced the brain-changing effects of exercise. And I did it in a completely inadvertent way. I was actually at the height of all the memory work that I was doing — data was pouring in, I was becoming known in my field for all of this memory work. And it should have been going great. It was, scientifically. But when I stuck my head out of my lab door, I noticed something. I had no social life. I spent too much time listening to those brain cells in a dark room, by myself.

(Laughter) I didn’t move my body at all. I had gained 25 pounds. And actually, it took me many years to realize it, I was actually miserable. And I shouldn’t be miserable. And I went on a river-rafting trip — by myself, because I had no social life. And I came back — (Laughter)

thinking, “Oh, my God, I was the weakest person on that trip.” And I came back with a mission. I said, “I’m never going to feel like the weakest person on a river-rafting trip again.” And that’s what made me go to the gym. And I focused my type-A personality on going to all the exercise classes at the gym. I tried everything. I went to kickbox, dance, yoga, step class, and at first it was really hard. But what I noticed is that after every sweat-inducing workout that I tried, I had this great mood boost and this great energy boost. And that’s what kept me going back to the gym. Well, I started feeling stronger. I started feeling better, I even lost that 25 pounds.

And now, fast-forward a year and a half into this regular exercise program and I noticed something that really made me sit up and take notice. I was sitting at my desk, writing a research grant, and a thought went through my mind that had never gone through my mind before. And that thought was, “Gee, grant-writing is going well today.” And all the scientists — yeah, all the scientists always laugh when I say that, because grant-writing never goes well. It is so hard; you’re always pulling your hair out, trying to come up with that million-dollar-winning idea. But I realized that the grant-writing was going well, because I was able to focus and maintain my attention for longer than I had before. And my long-term memory — what I was studying in my own lab — seemed to be better in me. And that’s when I put it together.

Maybe all that exercise that I had included and added to my life was changing my brain. Maybe I did an experiment on myself without even knowing it. So as a curious neuroscientist, I went to the literature to see what I could find about what we knew about the effects of exercise on the brain. And what I found was an exciting and a growing literature that was essentially showing everything that I noticed in myself. Better mood, better energy, better memory, better attention. And the more I learned, the more I realized how powerful exercise was. Which eventually led me to the big decision to completely shift my research focus. And so now, after several years of really focusing on this question, I’ve come to the following conclusion: that exercise is the most transformative thing that you can do for your brain today for the following three reasons.

Number one: it has immediate effects on your brain. A single workout that you do will immediately increase levels of neurotransmitters like dopamine, serotonin and noradrenaline. That is going to increase your mood right after that workout, exactly what I was feeling. My lab showed that a single workout can improve your ability to shift and focus attention, and that focus improvement will last for at least two hours. And finally, studies have shown that a single workout will improve your reaction times which basically means that you are going to be faster at catching that cup of Starbucks that falls off the counter, which is very, very important.

But these immediate effects are transient, they help you right after. What you have to do is do what I did, that is change your exercise regime, increase your cardiorespiratory function, to get the long-lasting effects. And these effects are long-lasting because exercise actually changes the brain’s anatomy, physiology and function. Let’s start with my favorite brain area, the hippocampus. The hippocampus — or exercise actually produces brand new brain cells, new brain cells in the hippocampus, that actually increase its volume, as well as improve your long-term memory, OK? And that including in you and me.

Number two: the most common finding in neuroscience studies, looking at effects of long-term exercise, is improved attention function dependent on your prefrontal cortex. You not only get better focus and attention, but the volume of the hippocampus increases as well. And finally, you not only get immediate effects of mood with exercise but those last for a long time. So you get long-lasting increases in those good mood neurotransmitters.

But really, the most transformative thing that exercise will do is its protective effects on your brain. Here you can think about the brain like a muscle. The more you’re working out, the bigger and stronger your hippocampus and prefrontal cortex gets. Why is that important? Because the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus are the two areas that are most susceptible to neurodegenerative diseases and normal cognitive decline in aging. So with increased exercise over your lifetime, you’re not going to cure dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, but what you’re going to do is you’re going to create the strongest, biggest hippocampus and prefrontal cortex so it takes longer for these diseases to actually have an effect. You can think of exercise, therefore, as a supercharged 401K for your brain, OK? And it’s even better, because it’s free.

So this is the point in the talk where everybody says, “That sounds so interesting, Wendy, but I really will only want to know one thing. And that is, just tell me the minimum amount of exercise I need to get all these changes.”

And so I’m going to tell you the answer to that question. First, good news: you don’t have to become a triathlete to get these effects. The rule of thumb is you want to get three to four times a week exercise minimum 30 minutes an exercise session, and you want to get aerobic exercise in. That is, get your heart rate up. And the good news is, you don’t have to go to the gym to get a very expensive gym membership. Add an extra walk around the block in your power walk. You see stairs — take stairs. And power-vacuuming can be as good as the aerobics class that you were going to take at the gym.

So I’ve gone from memory pioneer to exercise explorer. From going into the innermost workings of the brain, to trying to understand how exercise can improve our brain function, and my goal in my lab right now is to go beyond that rule of thumb that I just gave you — three to four times a week,30 minutes. I want to understand the optimum exercise prescription for you, at your age, at your fitness level, for your genetic background, to maximize the effects of exercise today and also to improve your brain and protect your brain the best for the rest of your life.

But it’s one thing to talk about exercise, and it’s another to do it. So I’m going to invoke my power as a certified exercise instructor, to ask you all to stand up.

We’re going to do just one minute of exercise. It’s call-and-response, just do what I do, say what I say, and make sure you don’t punch your neighbor, OK? Music!

(Upbeat music)

Five,six,seven,eight, it’s right, left, right, left. And I say, I am strong now. Let’s hear you.
Audience: I am strong now.
Wendy Suzuki: Ladies, I am Wonder Woman-strong. Let’s hear you!
Audience: I am Wonder Woman-strong.
WS: New move — uppercut, right and left. I am inspired now. You say it!
Audience: I am inspired now.
WS: Last move — pull it down, right and left, right and left. I say, I am on fire now! You say it.
Audience: I am on fire now.
WS: And done! OK, good job!

Thank you. I want to leave you with one last thought. And that is, bringing exercise in your life will not only give you a happier, more protective life today, but it will protect your brain from incurable diseases. And in this way it will change the trajectory of your life for the better.

Thank you very much.
Thank you.

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TEDまとめ(1):エキスパートたちが贈る極上のメッセージ ライフハックとしてではなく、英語学習にも極めて有用なのが、著名人が10分程度のプレゼンを行うTEDです。 TED Talksと...