• How Does Your Brain Process Feelings of

    From Runners World@24:150/1 to All on Thu Sep 17 21:31:34 2020
    How Does Your Brain Process Feelings of Fatigue?

    The findings may advance physical performance in the future,
    researchers suggest.
    By Elizabeth Millard
    Sep 17, 2020

    fatigue
    Lakota Gambill
    * A recent study, published in Nature Communications, found that
    fatigue may be in your head, at least partially.
    * Researchers found that people tended to avoid risk when it came to
    powering through, even when tired.
    * In this future, this research may lead to developing cognitive
    strategies that could change how perceive effort is perceived,
    possibly making efforts feel less fatiguing.
    __________________________________________________________________

    Whether you’re inside on the treadmill or outside for a long run,
    that dreaded moment where you hit the wall—the one where you just can’t
    seem to power through—feels the same.

    As it turns out, a part of that fatigue may be all in your head. And
    knowing exactly where it occurs in the brain could drive
    performance-boosting therapies in the future, according to a recent
    study in Nature Communications.

    Researchers recruited 20 study participants and asked them to grasp and
    squeeze a sensor repeatedly, varying their level of effort from minimal
    to maximum force. Using data from MRI scans and computer modeling, they
    found that feelings of fatigue seem to arise from the motor cortex—the
    area of the brain responsible for controlling movement—according to
    study co-author Vikram Chib, Ph.D., assistant professor of
    biomedical engineering at the Johns Hopkins University School of
    Medicine.

    As an additional measure to determine how this affects the brain’s
    function, researchers offered participants two choices for continuing.
    One was considered more “risky,” setting the amount of effort based on
    a coin flip that offered the chance to exert either no effort or a
    predetermined effort level. The “safe” choice was just the
    predetermined level.

    By introducing uncertainty, researchers were able to see how much each
    participant valued their effort. That offered insight into whether
    people would choose to power through, even when fatigued.
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    “Unsurprisingly, we found that people tend to be more risk-averse to
    avoid effort,” Chib told Bicycling. All but one of the participants
    chose the safe option, and scans indicated that for everyone, the motor
    cortex was deactivated during the decision-making process.
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    Chib said this falls in line with previous studies indicating that when
    people become fatigued, motor cortex activity declines, which can
    lead to fewer signals being sent down to the muscles, leading to a
    reduction in power during a hill workout, for example.

    Will these findings lead to hacking the motor cortex so bonking becomes
    a thing of the past? Not quite yet, but it’s also not impossible.

    “We think we might be able to use noninvasive brain stimulation to make
    motor cortex activity align with an individual’s expectations of
    performance,” said Chib. “Another thing we might be able to do is
    introduce cognitive strategies that could get people to change how they
    perceive effort, and this might influence motor cortical activity
    and make efforts feel less fatiguing.”

    Join Runner’s World+ for more performance-boosting health news!

    From: Bicycling US
    Elizabeth Millard Elizabeth Millard is a freelance writer focusing
    on health, wellness, fitness, and food.
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