There
have been many headlines in recent years about the potentially negative impacts
contact sports can have on athletes' brains. But a new Northwestern University
study shows that, in the absence of injury, athletes across a variety of sports
-- including football, soccer and hockey -- have healthier brains than
non-athletes.
"No
one would argue against the fact that sports lead to better physically fitness,
but we don't always think of brain fitness and sports," said senior author
Nina Kraus, the Hugh Knowles Professor of Communication Sciences and
Neurobiology and director of Northwestern's Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory
(Brainvolts). "We're saying that playing sports can tune the brain to
better understand one's sensory environment."
Athletes
have an enhanced ability to tamp down background electrical noise in their
brain to better process external sounds, such as a teammate yelling a play or a
coach calling to them from the sidelines, according to the study of nearly
1,000 participants, including approximately 500 Northwestern Division I
athletes.
Kraus
likens the phenomenon to listening to a DJ on the radio.
"Think
of background electrical noise in the brain like static on the radio,"
Kraus said. "There are two ways to hear the DJ better: minimize the static
or boost the DJ's voice. We found that athlete brains minimize the background
'static' to hear the 'DJ' better."
The
study will be published Dec. 9 in the journal Sports Health.
"A
serious commitment to physical activity seems to track with a quieter nervous
system," Kraus said. "And perhaps, if you have a healthier nervous
system, you may be able to better handle injury or other health problems."
The
findings could motivate athletic interventions for populations that struggle
with auditory processing. In particular, playing sports may offset the
excessively noisy brains often found in children from low-income areas, Kraus
said.
This
is the latest study from the neural processing of sound in sports concussions
and contact sports partnership, a five-year, National Institutes of
Health-funded research collaboration between Brainvolts and Northwestern
University Athletics, which launched last year. The study examined the brain
health of 495 female and male Northwestern student athletes and 493 age- and
sex-matched control subjects.
Kraus
and her collaborators delivered speech syllables to study participants through
earbuds and recorded the brain's activity with scalp electrodes. The team
analyzed the ratio of background noise to the response to the speech sounds by
looking at how big the response to sound was relative to the background noise.
Athletes had larger responses to sound than non-athletes, the study showed.
Like
athletes, musicians and those who can speak more than one language also have an
enhanced ability to hear incoming sound signals, Kraus said. However,
musicians' and multilinguals' brains do so by turning up the sound in their
brain versus turning down the background noise in their brain.
"They
all hear the 'DJ' better but the musicians hear the 'DJ' better because they
turn up the 'DJ,' whereas athletes can hear the 'DJ' better because they can
tamp down the 'static,'" Kraus said.
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