Washington: If you feel you are forgetting all that you’ve crammed in during a study session, then go for a run. A new study says that a student’s choice of activity after a period of learning, such as cramming for an exam, has a direct effect on their ability to remember information.
The researchers behind the new study, from the University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, say students should do moderate exercise, like running, rather than taking part in a passive activity such as playing computer games if they want to make sure they remember what they learned.
“I had kids in an age where computer games started to be of high interest,” said lead author Harald Kindermann.
“I wanted to find out how this and hence the increasing lack of exercise in fresh air — impacts their ability to memorize facts for school,” Kindermann added.
In the study, the researcher and his colleagues asked 60 men aged 16-29 to memorize a range of information, from learning a route on a city map to memorizing German-Turkish word pairs. They were then split into three groups: one group played a violent computer game, Counter Strike, one went for a run and one (the control group) spent time outside.
“Our data demonstrates that playing a video game is not helpful for improving learning effects,” Kindermann added. “Instead it is advisable for youngsters, and most probably for adults too, to do moderate exercise after a learning cycle.”
The stress hormone cortisol is known to have an impact on our memory retention: in some circumstances it helps us remember things, and in others it impairs our memory. There are two types of stress in this sense, psychological and physical, and it could be that substances released by a physical stress like running improve memory retention.
The researchers had two main hypotheses. First, it could be that violent computer games trick the brain into believing it is under real physical threat. This, combined with the psychological stress of gameplay, means that the brain focuses on these perceived threats, and rejects any information it has just learned.
Alternatively, their second hypothesis was that the physical stress of running switches the brain into “memory storage mode” where it retains the information the student wants to remember.
During moderate exercise like running, the body produces more cortisol to keep the body’s systems in balance while it’s under physical stress. It’s this cortisol that could help improve memory. However, the link between cortisol levels and memory retention is uncertain, so further research is needed.
Kindermann and the team now plan to extend this study and investigate the effects of violent computer games and other post-study activities on long-term memory.
The study has been published in Cognitive Systems Research.
ANI