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Ixtab
03-28-2007, 12:27 AM
1940s IQ Tests Helping to Reveal How lifestyle Affects the Brain
By Shan Ross• Scotsman • 3/26/07

REDISCOVERED IQ tests carried out on every 11-year-old child in Scotland 60 years ago have given scientists a unique opportunity to pinpoint factors which can damage the brain as well as the body.

Follow up tests on a number of the original study group show smoking, obesity, poor diet and lack of physical exercise known to contribute to diseases such as cancer and diabetes can also affect the mind.

Findings suggest that “dementing diseases” such as Alzheimer’s are partly self-inflicted and could be delayed or avoided by a healthier lifestyle.

Scientists have also discovered a small group of men known as the “elite old” who have defied the logic of ageing and whose IQ and fitness levels have risen throughout their lives and appear to be still rising.

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Ian Deary, professor of differential psychology at the University of Edinburgh, traced the ledgers after noticing a reference to the study in a book. “By tracking down and retesting the people in that study we can see how their mental powers have changed over the decades and what impact their lifestyles have had on those changes,” Prof Deary said.

About 1,500 of those involved in the study have been traced in a joint effort between Prof Deary and Lawrence Whalley, professor of mental health at the University of Aberdeen.

Participants undertook a range of tests and were given an MRI scan of their brains to assess any deterioration caused by ageing.

Prof Whalley said lifestyle definitely affects the brain.

He explained: “What is emerging is that people who are brighter, more socially engaged, and who live healthy lives, retain their mental faculties as well as their physical health for much longer.”http://inverted-world.com/index.php/news/news/1940s_iq_tests_helping_to_reveal_how_lifestyle_affects_the_brain/

Ratatoskur
03-28-2007, 11:57 AM
Scientists have also discovered a small group of men known as the “elite old” who have defied the logic of ageing and whose IQ and fitness levels have risen throughout their lives and appear to be still rising.


Reminds me of this guy, Arthur de Vany. Saw this interview on some forum, maybe it was this one?

http://www.honewatson.com/images/artRun.jpg
That's him at 60 I think. He's 68 now. Superfit.

http://www.t-nation.com/readTopic.do?id=709484

Here's his blog.

http://www.arthurdevany.com/