Tests
show the human brain must work hard to avoid sloth
University
of British Columbia
The
researchers asked volunteers to react to simple stick drawings depicting scenes
of physical inactivity and physical activity, and discovered that brain
activity differed depending on the scene. Credit:
UBC Media Relations
If
getting to the gym seems like a struggle, a University of British Columbia
researcher wants you to know this: the struggle is real, and it's happening
inside your brain.
The
brain is where Matthieu Boisgontier and his colleagues went looking for answers
to what they call the "exercise paradox": for decades, society has
encouraged people to be more physically active, yet statistics show that
despite our best intentions, we are actually becoming less active.
The
research findings, published recently in Neuropsychologia, suggest
that our brains may simply be wired to prefer lying on the couch.
"Conserving energy has been essential for humans' survival, as it allowed us to be more efficient in searching for food and shelter, competing for sexual partners, and avoiding predators," said Boisgontier, a postdoctoral researcher in UBC's brain behaviour lab at the department of physical therapy, and senior author of the study.
"The failure of public policies to counteract the pandemic of physical inactivity may be due to brain processes that have been developed and reinforced across evolution."
For
the study, the researchers recruited young adults, sat them in front of a
computer, and gave them control of an on-screen avatar. They then flashed small
images, one a time, that depicted either physical activity or physical
inactivity.
Subjects had to move the avatar as quickly as possible toward the pictures of physical activity and away from the pictures of physical inactivity -- and then vice versa.
Subjects had to move the avatar as quickly as possible toward the pictures of physical activity and away from the pictures of physical inactivity -- and then vice versa.
Meanwhile,
electrodes recorded what was happening in their brains. Participants were
generally faster at moving toward active pictures and away from lazy pictures,
but brain-activity readouts called electroencephalograms showed that doing the
latter required their brains to work harder.
"We
knew from previous studies that people are faster at avoiding sedentary
behaviours and moving toward active behaviours. The exciting novelty of our
study is that it shows this faster avoidance of physical inactivity comes at a
cost -- and that is an increased involvement of brain resources,"
Boisgontier said. "These results suggest that our brain is innately attracted to sedentary behaviours."
Boisgontier said. "These results suggest that our brain is innately attracted to sedentary behaviours."
The
question now becomes whether people's brains can be re-trained.
"Anything
that happens automatically is difficult to inhibit, even if you want to,
because you don't know that it is happening. But knowing that it is happening
is an important first step," Boisgontier said.
Boisgontier
is also affiliated with the University of Leuven (Belgium) and the Research
Foundation -- Flanders (FWO). He led this study with Boris Cheval of the
University of Geneva, and their international team of researchers from the
University of Oxford (Eda Tipura), the University of Geneva (Nicolas Burra,
Jaromil Frossard, Dan Orsholits), and the Université Côte d'Azur (Rémi Radel).