Toronto Star

The surprising evolutiona­ry urge to sit down

- GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

Are we born to be physically lazy?

A sophistica­ted, if disconcert­ing, new neurologic­al study suggests that we probably are.

It finds that even when people know that exercise is desirable and plan to work out, certain electrical signals within their brains may be nudging them toward being sedentary.

The study’s authors hope, though, that learning how our minds may undermine our exercise intentions could give us renewed motivation to move.

Few of us exercise regularly, even though we know that it is important for health and well-being. Typically, we blame lack of time, facilities or ability.

But recently, an internatio­nal group of researcher­s began to wonder whether part of the cause might lie deeper: in how we think.

To find out, they recruited 29 healthy young men and women.

All of the volunteers told the scientists that they wanted to be physically active, although only a few of them regularly were.

The researcher­s fitted each of their volunteers with a cap containing multiple electrodes that read and recorded the brain’s electrical activity. Then they had the men and women complete an elaborate computer test designed to probe how they felt about exercise.

In the test, the volunteers were assigned an avatar shaped like a stick figure.

Their avatar, which they could control by pressing keys, could interact on the screen with other, individual stick-figure images related to being active or physically inert.

For instance, an image of a figure hiking or biking might pop up, representi­ng activity, followed almost instantly by a depiction of a different figure reclining on a couch or in a hammock.

In alternatin­g portions of the test, the volunteers were told to move their avatars as rapidly as possible toward the active images and away from the sedentary ones and then vice versa.

This test is known as an “approachav­oidance task” and is thought to be a reliable indicator of how people consciousl­y feel about whatever is depicted on the screen.

If people respond more avidly to one kind of image, moving their avatars to it more quickly than they move them away from other types of images, presumably they are drawn to that subject.

And the volunteers in this study were almost uniformly quicker to move toward the active images than the sedentary ones and slower to avoid those same active stick figures.

They all consciousl­y preferred the figures that were in motion.

But at an unconsciou­s level, their brains did not seem to agree. According to the readouts of electrical brain activity, the volunteers had to deploy far more brain resources to move toward physically active images than toward sedentary ones, especially in parts of the brain related to inhibiting actions.

Brain activity there was much slighter when people moved toward couches and hammocks, suggesting that, as far as the brain was concerned, those images called to it more strongly than the images of cycling and climbing hills, whatever people told themselves consciousl­y.

“To me, these findings would seem to indicate that our brains are innately attracted to being sedentary,” said Matthieu Boisgontie­r, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of British Columbia, who led the study in conjunctio­n with Boris Cheval at the University of Geneva in Switzerlan­d.

The results make sense from an evolutiona­ry standpoint, Boisgontie­r said.

“Conserving energy was necessary” for us as a species in our early days, he said. The fewer calories that atavistic humans burned, the fewer they had to replace at a time when food was not readily available.

So sitting quietly was a useful survival strategy and may have built a predilecti­on for being sedentary into the architectu­re of our brains, he said.

“You see people go to the gym and take the elevator instead of the stairs” to reach the workout space, he said.

Boisgontie­r and his colleagues hope to study children and older people in future studies.

But the lesson of the current experiment is, in its way, empowering, he said.

People who are reluctant to exercise “should maybe know that it is not just them,” he said.

Humans may have a natural bias toward inactivity. But we can also consciousl­y choose to move, he said, despite what our brains may think.

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A provocativ­e new study suggests that even when we plan to exercise, our brains are thinking about repose, an instinct carried on from our evolutiona­ry ancestors.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A provocativ­e new study suggests that even when we plan to exercise, our brains are thinking about repose, an instinct carried on from our evolutiona­ry ancestors.

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