5 Ways to Increase Brain Power
Being super smart is one of those status things that many wish for, if not for themselves, at least for their kids. After all, smart people often make more money, get more recognition, have more power, and win more admiration from the other sex. Studies show that 80 percent of Americans wish they could improve their ability to remember things, and 94 percent wish they were smarter, at least about money (globally, that’s 89 percent). (1)
“The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.” — Albert Einstein
The quest for genius has spawned a booming industry of products and literature designed to maximize IQ, with the most recent entries to the marketplace being a plethora of brain-training products, games, and websites such as Lumosity and Brain HQ. Brain training has become a multibillion-dollar business, in spite of the fact that in 2014, a consortium of 70 of the world’s leading psychologists and scientists reviewed all the evidence and ultimately issued a report stating that brain-training products do zilch to boost IQ. (2) The only thing that people gain from playing those brain-enhancing games, the authors found, was that they got better at playing the brain-training games, while their IQs stagnated.
The tragedy of that finding was subsequently countered by a 2015 study of 11,430 people that concluded that while brain training might not smarten up the masses, it does do something beneficial for those over the age of 60. (3) After six weeks of training, the older participants had enhanced verbal reasoning skills, which the researchers took as a sign that brain training might slow down cognitive decay in the elderly—but so do crossword puzzles, and they’re free. In any event, the brain-training sites and products are still doing well, but if you aren’t over 60 or you want intelligence beyond good verbal skills, there are other things you can do that are more surefire ways to smarten up.
5 Yogic Reminders To Increase Memory, IQ, and Intelligence
1. Exercise
Probably the best thing you can do for your brain has nothing to do with thinking. It turns out that exercising builds not only muscle tissue but also, brain cells. That’s because exercise increases a protein in the brain called BDNF, and BDNF triggers neuron growth, which in turn increases hippocampus mass. (The hippocampus is the brain region associated with memory.) Also, exercise increases the amount of oxygen available to the brain.
For instance, one study found that women who did weight training had less brain shrinkage than women who did not. Another found that senior citizens who garden or do other light exercise reduce their chances of cognitive impairment by 50 percent. (4) And yet one more found that kids who walk to school do better on tests than those who ride in a car.
Even rodent brains benefit from fitness. In one experiment, scientists found that those mice that ran on a wheel for 45 days had more neurons in the hippocampus than did sedentary mice. But simply running on a wheel—or running on a street—won’t do the trick. It turns out that different forms of exercise have different effects on the brain, so in order to maximize intelligence, you need to do it all—weight training, stretching, yoga, and aerobics, too.
2. Choose Friends Wisely
Make smart friends. Not that you can issue intelligence tests to your buddies to make sure they qualify, but studies show that your IQ most likely is the average of the five people you spend the most time with. Smart friends will most likely challenge you to think in new ways, keep your vocabulary polished, and engage mentally. Even if you can’t find friends as brilliant as you are, it’s better to hang out with others than to isolate. A Harvard University study of over 17,000 people over the age of 50 found that those with the best social lives also had dramatically reduced rates of cognitive decline—50 percent less—as they aged.
Ironically, though, while research indicates that doing group activities and participating in social activities helps keep intelligence intact, the research underlines the fact that smarter people often prefer to be alone. (5)
3. Switch Things Up
Doing routine things in a different way can create new connections between different regions of the brain, and even open new neural pathways. For instance, you can brush your teeth with your non-dominant hand. Try writing with your left if you normally are a “righty.” Change your daily schedule, your route to work, or the arrangement of objects in your home. Turn some objects upside down. Move to a different seat at the table. Turn your desk around, eat new foods, read backward. (Experiment with yoga asana variations.)
4. Catch Up on Sleep
Too many late nights can slow down your cognitive speed, impair your memory, undermine your ability to do math, and even disrupt your ability to solve spatial orientation problems. In other words, instead of staying up late playing brain-enhancing games, go to bed on time.
5. Eat Brainy Foods
Research shows that the Mediterranean Diet as well as the DASH diet (for hypertension) significantly slow cognitive decline. (6) Junk food, on the other hand, deletes IQ points. (7) And there are particular foods that actually increase cognition, improve memory, and slow mental decline in the elderly. Among the best: blueberries, oily fish, nuts, broccoli, sage, pumpkin seeds. (8) And supplements containing L-Carnosine, DMAE, and Acetyl-L-Carnitine can give an additional boost by helping to maintain the health of brain cells.
The bottom line is that some of the same things that keep your body healthy will also keep your mind spry and functional—exercise, a good diet, good sleeping habits, and good friends.
Also, read...
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Material originally published at www.jonbarron.org.
Copyright © 1999-2018. Baseline of Health® Foundation
Used by permission of the Baseline of Health® Foundation.
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Jon Barron is the founder of the Baseline of Health® Foundation, whose website attracts millions of visitors worldwide so people can learn about health and nutrition for free. He has lectured internationally and has been featured on many regional and syndicated media programs as an expert in disease prevention, anti-aging, and nutrition.
Resources
- Barney, Lee. “94% of Americans Wish They Were Smarter About Money.” 12 January 2011. Financial Planning. 19 January 2017.http://www.financial-planning.com/news/94-of-americans-wish-they-were-smarter-about-money
- Hambrick, David Z. “Brain Training Doesn’t Make You Smarter.” 2 December 2014. Scientific American. 19 January 2017. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/brain-training-doesn-t-make-you-smarter/
- Friedman, Richard. “Can You Get Smarter?” 23 October 2015. The New York Times. 19 January 2017. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/25/opinion/sunday/can-you-get-smarter.html?_r=0
- Head Squeeze. “Brain: Why exercise boosts IQ” 10 October 2015. BBC Future. 20 January 2017. http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20141010-why-exercise-boosts-iq
- Drum, Kevin. “It’s True: Smart People Would Prefer if You Went Away.” 19 March 2016. Mother Jones. 20 January 2017. http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2016/03/its-true-smart-people-would-prefer-you-went-away
- Morris, MC et al. “MIND diet slows cognitive decline with aging.” 11 September 2015. Alzheimer’s Dement (in Pub Med). 22 January 2017. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26086182
- Goodin, Kate. “Junk Food Diet Linked to Lower IQ in Children.” Parenting. 22 January 2017. http://www.parenting.com/blogs/show-and-tell/kate-parentingcom/junk-food-diet-linked-lower-iq-children
- Lewin, Jo. “10 foods to boost your brainpower.” Good Food. 22 January 2017. http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/howto/guide/10-foods-boost-your-brainpower
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