Bird watchers no bird brains

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Comparing the brains of 29 expert bird watchers with 29 beginners, Canadian scientists found the dedicated 'twitchers' had denser attention- and perception-related areas in their brains, which was linked to more accurate bird identification, even among older bird fans. The team determined this by looking at how water travelled around the participants' brains, finding it spread further and more easily in the brains of the experts. Birding may benefit the brain because it requires a keen eye, paying attention, and a strong memory, the authors say. To see if being a bird stan can provide benefits in other areas of life, they also asked the particpants to remember random faces that were paired with birds, and found even older experts outperformed the beginners. Being a bird watcher may benefit the brain and help older people stay cognitively healthy, the authors conclude.

News release

From: Society for Neuroscience

Skills from being a birder may change—and benefit—your brain

Training to become a birder requires a degree of perception, attention, and memory that reorganizes the structure and activity of distinct brain areas. As experts age, these brain areas continue to show structural changes that may be beneficial to cognition.
Research shows that as individuals learn and acquire a new skill, their brain structure and activity changes. But how do more complex skills involving multiple learning processes influence the brain? Researchers led by Erik Wing, from Baycrest Hospital, compared the brains of 29 expert birders with 29 age- and sex-matched beginners. Because birding requires a keen eye, attention, and strong memory, this work may have implications for experts of skills using similar processes.

The researchers found that expert birders had more structurally compact attention- and perception-related brain areas, which was linked to more accurate bird identification. Wing elaborates, “The measure we used is the diffusion of water molecules in the brain. One way of putting it is that there’s less constraint on where water goes in the brains of experts.” Some of these more compact brain areas supported identification and memory for less familiar birds that were not local to the area.

These structural changes in attention- and perception-related brain areas persisted in older birders. Speculating on what this might mean, says Wing, “Acquiring skills from birding could be beneficial for cognition as people age.” The researchers continue to probe this idea by exploring whether older adults draw on the skills acquired from birding during other cognitive tasks. They’ve discovered that older birders can remember arbitrary faces paired with birds better than beginners. Thus, linking arbitrary items to established knowledge in specific domains may enhance recall of information outside of known domains.

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JNeurosci
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Organisation/s: Baycrest Academy for Research and Education, Canada
Funder: This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Grant MOP4956 to A.G.).
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