Creative Pursuits Linked to Reversal of Brain Aging, New Research Shows
Santiago, Chile – Engaging in creative activities, from painting and dancing to gaming and music, can demonstrably reverse brain aging, according to a groundbreaking new study published by researchers at Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez and Trinity College. the research, detailed in The Conversation, reveals that artistic engagement strengthens key brain areas, improving communication and perhaps delaying cognitive decline.
the study involved both lifelong artists and a control group, utilizing “brain clocks” – algorithms that assess brain age based on MRI scans – to measure the impact of creative practice. Researchers found that, on average, artists’ brains appeared approximately three years younger than their chronological age.
“Creativity protects brain areas that are vulnerable to ageing and makes brain communication more efficient,” explained researchers Carlos Coronel and Agustín Ibáñez. They likened the improved brain communication to “building more, larger, and higher-quality roads to communicate between cities within a country.”
Further inquiry included a smaller experiment where individuals with no prior experience were trained in the strategy video game StarCraft II for just 30 hours. Even this short burst of creative learning resulted in a reduction in brain age of two to three years.
The benefits weren’t tied to a specific art form. Whether participants engaged in dancing, painting, music, or gaming, the positive effects on brain function were consistent. The study highlights that areas of the brain crucial for focus and learning are often the first to age, but creative practice appears to bolster their connections and adaptability.
the researchers emphasize the implications extend beyond cultural enrichment. “Our study reframes creativity as a biological pathway to brain health and resilience, not only a cultural or psychological phenomenon,” they stated. The findings suggest a potential for integrating creative activities into education, public health initiatives, and strategies for supporting aging populations, moving beyond a focus solely on disease prevention to embrace creativity as a means of sustaining cognitive and emotional wellbeing.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here.