The Unexpected Ways You Sap Your Own Brainpower!
You cover all bases to try and stay sharp: Finish the crossword, crack open a book, hit the gym. And you probably do your best to avoid the big brain-rotters, like watching TV for hours on end. But there are also draining habits you didn't know would hurt your head. Check out these five.
Worrying about money
Being preoccupied with financial concerns can cause you to make
slower and less responsible decisions while lowering your ability to
focus, according to a 2013 study in the journal Science. "Our
minds have limited bandwidth—there's only so much we can think about at
any one time," explains study author Eldar Shafir, Ph.D. To free up
brain space, try free online tools like Mint.com or Simple.com,
or focus on reducing the other stressors in your life. Reduce the
number of things you have to keep track of, and you're giving yourself a
"bandwidth gift," which allows you to do other things better, he
explains.
Limiting your social circle
People with a larger network of friends have brains with bigger,
better-connected regions responsible for decision-making and tracking
other's actions, reports a study from Oxford University. People with
more friends may use certain parts of their brains more frequently, and
the brain adapts to step up to that challenge, researchers speculate.
Chat up your neighbor or reconnect with college buds: Lonely people have
a 64 percent greater risk of developing dementia, according to a 2012
Dutch study.
Using a GPS
A 2011 study from University College London found that cab
drivers who navigated the complex layout of London's streets from
experience had higher levels of grey matter in the hippocampus, which
caused them to have a better memory. What's more, the taxi drivers were
not predisposed to having high levels of grey matter, but instead
acquired it. Researchers speculate that any mentally challenging task
would change your brain's structure to increase your recall.
Powering through sleepiness
Naps may look lazy, but catching sleep during the day could
actually boost brainpower: A German study found that participants who
took a 40-minute nap after studying performed up to 85 percent better on
a memory test than non-nappers. Sleeping right after learning could
help speed the process of retaining information. It is still unclear how
long the perfect nap should last: In one study from the University of
California, Berkeley, people who napped for 90 minutes showed
significant improvements in memory. But Australian research suggests
even naps that last a few minutes can increase alertness.
Sticking to the same hobbies
Your brain responds to workouts the same way your muscles do:
When you try something new, it becomes stronger. But after constant
exposure to the same routine, your ability to bulk up peaks unless you
switch to harder tasks. That's what a study from the Mind Research
Network found: When participants were first taught Tetris, their brain
used more glucose—which gives your brain energy—and bulked up their
number of neural connections, representing learned expertise. After the
initial cognitive boost, participants saw a decline in glucose
consumption and neural connections. They remained just as skilled at
Tetris, but their brains got more efficient and stopped benefiting from
what was once a challenge. Just like you start a new workout plan every
few weeks, you should also try a new hobby.