EXERCISE INCREASES COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN CHILDREN
EXERCISE IMPROVES COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN CHILDREN Researchers investigate the effects of brief periods of light-intensity exercise on increasing cerebral blood flow in children. Cognitive or intellectual functions encompass thinking, understanding, memory, language, computation, and judgment and are performed in the cerebrum. The prefrontal cortex (PFC), located in the frontal lobe of the cerebral cortex, handles these functions. Studies have shown that exercise improves cognitive function through mechanisms such as enhanced cerebral blood flow, brain structural changes, and neurogenesis promotion. However, 81% of children globally do not engage in enough physical activity, leading to high levels of sedentary behavior and insufficient exercise. This lack of physical activity raises concerns about its negative impact on children's healthy brain development and cognitive function. A recent study published in Scientific Reports by doctoral student Takashi Naito from the Grad