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Oxford study suggests that juggling increases white matter ...


Juggling enhances connections in the brain | University of Oxford

Learning to juggle leads to changes in the white matter of the brain, an Oxford University study has shown.

Oxford study suggests that juggling increases white matter ... - Reddit

As the title suggests. Some examples, I would imagine are somewhat in the same ballpark as juggling: unicycling, learning instruments, ...

Juggling increases brain power - Home - BBC News

... white matter of the brain that is enlarged by learning to juggle ... juggle but all of them showed changes in white matter. The Oxford ...

Juggling Enhances Connections In The Brain - ScienceDaily

Learning to juggle leads to changes in the white matter of the brain, an Oxford University study has shown.

Learning to juggle grows brain networks for good | New Scientist

Like May, Scholz's group found increases in grey matter, but differences in the size and timing of the grey- and white-matter changes suggest ...

Training induces changes in white matter architecture - PMC

Yet evidence from animal studies suggests that white matter could alter with experience or training. ... Gray matter density increases after juggling training.

Juggle Balls, Not Numbers! | Office for Science and Society

To make things even more interesting, a study at the University of Oxford showed ... white matter of the jugglers, and no such increase in the ...

Learning new tricks improves wiring in the brain - Reuters

But all the newly trained jugglers showed changes in white matter -- suggesting the benefit was down to time spent training and practicing ...

Does juggling exercise your brain? - Entertainment | HowStuffWorks

Brain scans taken four weeks after the subjects stopped practicing showed that increases in both white and grey matter remained. Study ...

Juggling, Anyone? Learn A New Trick to Improve Your Brain's Wiring

Researchers at the University of Oxford have found that dedicating yourself to the pursuit of a new skill increases the amount of white matter in your brain.

Juggling matters on the brain - 2009 - Wiley Analytical Science

UK scientists have used magnetic resonance imaging to reveal that learning a complex task like juggling can causes changes in the white ...

Juggling rewires the brain (ABC News in Science)

Neuroscientists have discovered that learning to juggle causes changes in white matter, the nerve strands which help different parts of the ...

Juggling builds brain connections: study | CBC News

... white matter of their brains, British researchers have found ... juggling to improve their brains," said Oxford's Heidi Johansen-Berg. "We ...

Juggling builds better brains by adding gray, white matter

A study by Oxford University scientists, published by the journal ... increase the white matter in their brains by 5 percent. Study ...

The amazing phenomenon of muscle memory | by Oxford University

... juggling training there was an increase in the white ... Another juggling study showed that after training there were increases in grey matter ...

Juggling the Aging Process - The Hearing Solution

... learning to juggle. The scientists quickly saw a 5% increase in white matter in the brains of these novice jugglers. After four weeks, brain ...

Juggling as Brain Training | Curated Research + Commentary

Brain scans taken after four weeks without juggling practice showed that the new white matter remained and the amount of gray matter increased, ...

Neuroscience of Juggling - LinkedIn

A few new studies suggests that something as random and fun as juggling can improve brainpower. ... white matter. Essentially, there is a ...

Learning to juggle grows brain networks for good | New Scientist

After four more weeks without juggling, the extra white matter remained, suggesting that the change is permanent. ... white matter increased ...

Watching the Brain Learn | Scientific American

... white matter after learning to juggle. The technology, called ... shows that experience can increase myelin formation, and recently research ...