Saturday, 18 November 2017

How To Improve Memory, To contrate more

9 Tips On How To Improve Memory

Go high on flavonoids
Just have more soya
Look at cute stuff
Get some physical exercise
Get creative

It's natural to have recall issues when you grow old, but it can be avoided through
 simple lifestyle and dietary tweaks. Adding foods like berries, red wine, nuts, soya
, spinach, and beans to your daily diet and slashing alcohol can have a positive effect 
on memory. Do yoga or regular exercise ensures to improve focus and concentration. 
Remain socially active and participate in a lot of activities.

If you’ve been lately concerned about just how little you are able to remember, take a 
deep breath first. It’s possible you have too many things going and too much on your mind. 
It’s also possible you are not sleeping well. You may even be having a drink too many. 
It’s but natural to forget things as we grow older. Plus we depend so heavily on digital 
reminders and notes, we don’t really make the effort to commit information to the memory. 
But if you are really at a loss about how to improve your memory, here are 9 things to try.

1. Berries Are The Way To Go

There is a large volume of research that proves the wonders of flavonoid-rich foods for 
improving memory. They work to protect vulnerable neurons, enhance existing neuronal 
function, and stimulate neuronal regeneration.1
Sources: Munch on red, blue, and purple berries like blueberries and cranberries, plums, 
apples, pears, peaches, bananas, citrus fruits, nuts and beans, teas, red wine, unfiltered 
fruit juices (particularly grape juice), peppers, tomatoes, onions, and eggplants.

2. Eat More Spinach

A diet rich in iron and folic acid ensures improved memory and concentration. It is not
 only a must for growing children but also the elderly. Iron deficiency contributes to the 
less efficient supply of oxygen to the brain and also decreases brain energy production. 
Folic acid deficiency decreases intellectual capacity and impairs memory in the elderly.

Sources: For an adequate supply of these vital nutrients, gorge on green vegetables 
like cress, spinach, leeks, lentils, asparagus, and broccoli. Also have liver, eggs, beef, 
maize, fortified cereals, chickpeas, kidney beans, walnuts, almonds, apricots, and chestnuts
 are other top choices.2
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3. Include Soya In Your Diet

Soya, made of soybeans, is popularly used as a meat substitute in many countries 
and is rich in isoflavone phytoestrogens (plant estrogens). A study examined the effects 
of high versus low soya diets on attention, memory, and frontal lobe function in young healthy 
adults of both sexes for 10 weeks. Males and females on the high-soya diet showed significant 
improvements in short-term and long-term memory along with increased mental flexibility.3
4. Give Fatty Fish A Try

Fatty fish contain omega-3 fatty acids, which improve brain health. Studies note that fatty 
fish and fish oil supplements can promote cognitive function, especially in middle-aged adults.
4 Furthermore, fish is also believed to enhance memory and reduce the risk of age-related 
disorders like Alzheimer’s and dementia.5
Sources: Mackerel, lake trout, tuna, salmon, sardine and herring.

5. Say Bye To Booze

Several animals studies have shown that alcohol impairs memory. It primarily hampers 
the ability to form new long-term memories. Research suggests that the higher the volume 
of alcohol consumed, the greater the memory impairment. And if these large quantities are 
consumed rapidly, they can produce a memory blackout, making you forget key details of 
events or even the entire events.6
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6. Cat Videos For The Win

Well, we’re not kidding you on this. According to a research conducted at Japan’s 
Hiroshima University, looking at cute images of baby animals yields careful behavior 
and better concentration. A series of experiments engaged 132 students in different 
activities like playing the game Operation or finding a number in a random sequence. 
When these attempts were followed up with looking at cute baby animal photos, the 
participants improved their performance ratings by 44% on an average.7
7. Be A Social Butterfly

According to a study by the Harvard School of Public Health, elderly people in the US 
with an active social life may have a slower rate of memory decline. Marital status, 
volunteer activities, and contact with parents, children, and neighbors were used to 
analyze social integration in the study involving elderly subjects observed over 6 years.8
Another study observing 1138 older individuals revealed that even a 1-point increase in 
social activity score was associated with a 47% decrease in the rate of decline in global 
cognitive function. The 12-year study concluded that the rate of global cognitive decline 
was reduced by an average of 70% in folks who were regularly socially active.9
So don’t be all cooped up inside the house always. Go out, cultivate relationships, call up 
those friends and make memories – you’ll actually remember them if you’re more social.

8. Get Some Physical Exercise

The hippocampus in the brain is the seat of emotion, memory, and the autonomic nervous 
system. As we age (or even with alcohol abuse), the size of the hippocampus shrinks. 
According to a research, one year of aerobic exercise training was found to be successful in 
turning back the clock and increasing hippocampal volume by 2%. The age-related loss in 
volume of this part of the brain was actually reversed by 1 to 2 years, resulting in improved 
memory function.10 Running has been seen to tremendous benefits for the brain, 
from improving memory to increasing creativity.

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9. Try Some Yoga, Too

It’s the age of ADHD and with so many distractions it’s hard to concentrate and focus 
for adults and children alike. That’s where yoga comes in. According to a study of 159 
high-stress and 142 low-stress adolescent students, those who practiced yoga scored 
higher on concentration levels and exhibited better short-term memory. The students 
were divided into experimental and control groups for 7 weeks, with the experimental 
group practicing yoga asanas, pranayama, meditation, and prayer.11
10. Do A Lot Of Creative Activities

Research suggests that actively engaging in a variety of lifestyle activities such as 
listening to music, going to the movies, gardening, cooking, volunteering, playing games 
and cards helps maintain cognitive health in late life. These cognitively challenging activities 
especially help the elderly keep their wits and memory intact. The more challenging the activity, 
better the results.

Activities like reading books, doing the crossword, attending classes, drawing and sketching, 
and reading the newspaper rate higher for the elderly according to the study done on 436 older 
women. A greater variety of activities, regardless of cognitive challenge and frequency, led to 
an 8 to 11% decrease in the risk of impairment in verbal memory and global cognitive outcomes.
12
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11. Learn A New Language

Bilingual people could just be sharper than monolinguals! Studies note that by learning 
one or more languages (other than your native tongue), you can significantly improve 
condition and memory. Reports, in fact, have concluded that bilingual people have a greater 
memory power and cognitive skill, by observing the responses of several 5–7 year old 
children to certain demanding mental tasks.13
12. Tune In To Some Music

Good music generates positive feelings, which has psychologically been believed to enhance 
memory. Additionally, if you’ve learnt some form of music as a child, chances are you have a 
better memory than your peers who aren’t trained in music. However, this holds good in the 
case of verbal memory and not visual memory.14
The role of music in the treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) in old age has also been 
extensively researched. Several studies report that music could help in preventing the progress
 of Alzheimer’s and help the AD patients remember little things from their daily life.15
13. Sleep Well

A good night’s sleep might just be what you need to improve your memory! When you initially
 acquire a new piece of information, it needs to be stabilized and consolidated by your brain 
and then moved to your long-term memory. This process mainly takes place during sleep. 
However, the body’s stress hormone, cortisol, is most active at night. And, without proper sleep, 
cortisol can affect the process of memory transfer from one part of the brain to another.
(hippocampus to neocortical regions) So, if you haven’t been able to get those 8 hours of
 sleep, your memory consolidation can suffer.16
Well, who doesn’t really want a razor-sharp memory? Adopt these healthy lifestyle changes 
and see if they work.

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