Kids who play hard
every day may be making their brains, as well as their bodies, stronger.
A new study
reports that children who play vigorously for 20 to 40 minutes a day may
be better able to organize schoolwork, do class projects and learn mathematics.
"Children who
are not active may be at a disadvantage academically," says Catherine Davis,
an associate professor of pediatrics at the Medical College of Georgia
in Augusta. She presented the research last week at the annual meeting
of the Obesity Society, a group of weight-loss professionals.
Davis and colleagues
worked with 163 sedentary, overweight children, ages 7 to 11, for three
months. The children were divided into three groups: a control group that
did no physical activity after school; a group that did 20 minutes of vigorous
physical activity five days a week after school; and a group that did 40
minutes of such activity on those same days.
The activity
groups played intermittent, high-energy running games, such as flag tag,
relays, jump rope and modified basketball. They wore heart-rate monitors
and were given rewards for maintaining a high average heart rate. Students
also were given cognitive-function tests at the beginning and end of the
study. They were tested for their math and reading achievement and "executive
function."
Executive function
includes skills important for planning and organizing, focusing on schoolwork,
resisting impulses, self-monitoring and using strategies to achieve goals.
Children who have attention deficit disorder have difficulty with those
tasks.
Among the findings
from the National Institutes of Health-financed study:
• The children in the 40-minute
activity group had significant improvement on an executive-function test
compared with the control group. They increased about 4 points on a cognitive-performance
scale. Those in the 20-minute group showed about half that improvement.
• There was a small improvement
in math achievement for both exercise groups but no signs of improvement
in reading.
• Those in the exercise groups
lost about 1% to 2% of body fat.
The researchers
also performed brain scans and found that the children who were exercising
appeared to have more neural activity in the frontal areas of their brains,
an important area for executive function, Davis says. "The animal literature
tells us that exercise, particularly regular exercise, stimulates the growth
of blood vessels and neurons in the brain, so we think the same may be
happening in the children."
Other studies
have shown that executive function improves in older adults who become
more physically active, she says. "School systems need to know that to
reach their achievement targets, they need to add physical activity to
the school day rather than reduce it."
Phillip Tomporowski,
a study co-author and exercise psychologist at the University of Georgia
in Athens, says exercise "may well improve the underlying mental processes
that are involved in a lot of behaviors and academic tasks."
Says Darla Castelli,
assistant professor in the department of kinesiology and community health
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: "This research corroborates
several of our studies, which have also examined executive function in
kids. We found strong associations between math performance and aerobic
fitness among elementary-school-age children."
Howell Wechsler,
director of the Division of Adolescent and School Health for the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, says some children don't have as many
opportunities outside school to be as active as children in previous generations.
"Today there
is so much more competition for their time with all the attractive options
to be sedentary, from hundreds of cable stations to video games and computer
games," Wechsler says. "This makes it even more important to have physical
education programs and other opportunities for physical activity at school."
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