Posts Tagged ‘brain’
Exercise Improves Memory in Children

Never too late to start exercising, but the sooner the better. A new study from the University of Illinois says that physically active children tend to be smarter and have better memories than those who do not exercise. Do you want your kids have better grades in school? Well then, send them to gym class.
That exercise improves memory is not new. However, this research has found that the effects of physical activity are already being felt in childhood, as the child’s brain develops well if they exercise.

After analyzing the brains of 49 children aged between 9 and 10 years through magnetic resonance imaging, concluded that the hippocampus, one of the most important structures of the human brain is 12% larger in active children. Consequently, these children had higher scores on memory tests.
Prof. Art Kramer, a leader of this research, says the results are very important for everyone to become aware of how good it is to exercise early. Thus, all parents and schools should take priority and encourage physical activity in children.
As you saw, exercise is as important as studying for school children are held.
Improve your memory
Our memory is powerful and yet sometimes we forget some things and this is normal.
The memory is said to be the ability to keep information learned or experience and access it when needed. Our brain stores information of everything that happens and according to some experts overnight order information and save what seems important.
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Nurturing creativity
Any creative act is invigorating for him who is the author. Before finding them fed, it should help to develop. Because creativity requires more often to be fortified. Not that it takes effort, special exercises weight or concentration, you would like to get a better return on his body or his brain.
Epilepsy: Pikachu controlled?
We all know about the Pokemon madness which invaded France. Children no longer drop their console or their cards and do not miss a single episode of the cartoon. However, this worldwide success was a major setback. In 1997, 618 Japanese teenagers were hospitalized after watching an episode of the adventures of Pikachu. A succession of lightning had caused crises called photosensitive epilepsy. This situation can it appear today in France?
Remember, it was Tuesday, December 16, 1997. More than half of Japanese youth awaiting episode 37 of their favorite series: the Pokemon. After 20 minutes, the scene of the cartoon unfolds: Pikachu deck his opponent with a succession of flashes red and blue. And there is drama: 11 000 Japanese teenagers are victims of ailments, 618 must be hospitalized due to seizures of convulsions.
Epilepsy, not a common disease
Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder the most frequent one in two hundred is affected by this disease. A disease means anxiety for patients fearing the onset of a crisis. Anytime. Anywhere. And beyond the physical repercussions, fear of exclusion, epilepsy has become a real social disease that tends to marginalize those who are victims of school until the end of their life.
Children main victims
When discussing epilepsy, we should rather talk about epilepsy, both the diseases are different, both the prognosis and treatment modalities are different. If children are affected first, most are fortunately benign epilepsy in children. The maximum rate of the disease is between 0 and 1 year and remains very important to 10 years. It then gradually decreases to remain at low levels between 30 and 50 years and back dramatically after age 75.