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Study on aging draws attention from sports performance experts
Summary
An NIH-funded INHANCE neuroimaging study reported that BrainHQ exercises increased acetylcholine production in older adults, and sports performance experts are noting possible implications for attention and reaction skills as the Super Bowl approaches.
Content
A recent NIH-funded INHANCE neuroimaging study reported an increase in acetylcholine production after participants used BrainHQ exercises. The finding has drawn attention from specialists who work on peak performance in sport as well as from aging researchers. Acetylcholine is described in the article as involved in attention, alertness shifts, and neuromuscular function. The article places the study in the context of pre-game interest ahead of the Super Bowl and related speaking events.
Reported details:
- The INHANCE study, funded by the NIH, reported that BrainHQ exercises increased production of acetylcholine in older adults.
- The article quotes experts who link acetylcholine to attention speed and accuracy, which they say affects athletes' ability to recognize and react.
- The article mentions BrainHQ CEO Dr. Henry Mahncke describing prior focus on aging and noting that NFL legend Tom Brady reported using BrainHQ in the TB12 Method.
- A separate study cited in the article reported that active duty service members showed improvements in standard measures of cognitive resilience after BrainHQ training.
- Dr. Mahncke is scheduled to speak at the 13th Annual Brain Health Summit in San Francisco the day before the Super Bowl.
Summary:
Interest from sports performance experts follows the reported INHANCE finding because acetylcholine relates to attention and neuromuscular function, both relevant to athletic recognition-and-reaction tasks. The article notes related research in service members and ongoing public discussion, and Dr. Mahncke will address cognitive resilience at a pre-Super Bowl Brain Health Summit. Undetermined at this time.
