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<br />MARLIN LEVISONfile photo • mlevison@startribune.com , <br />A stroll through green space is restorative, providing “a palliative to the nonstop attentionaldemands of typical city streets,” said Jenny Roe, who oversaw the <br />study. <br />A walk in the woods does a brain good, researchers confirm <br />Article by: GRETCHEN REYNOLDS <br />Science Times <br />April 6, 2013 -5:03 PM <br />Scientists have known for some time that the human brain’s ability to stay calm and focused is limited and can be overwhelmedby <br />the constant noise and hectic, jangling demands of city living, sometimes resulting in a condition informally known as brain fatigue. <br />With brain fatigue, you are easily distracted, forgetful and mentally flighty. But an innovative new study from Scotland suggests that <br />you can ease it simply by strolling through a leafy park. <br />The idea that visiting parks or tree-filled plazas lessens stress and improves concentration is not new. Researchers have long <br />theorized that green spaces are calming, requiring less of our so-called directed mental attention than busy, urban streets do. <br />Natural settings invoke “soft fascination,” a beguiling term for quiet contemplation, during which directed attention is barely called <br />upon and the brain can reset those overstretched resources. <br />The theory, while agreeable, has been difficult to put to the test. Previousstudies have found that people who live near trees and <br />parks have lower levels of cortisol, a stress hormone, in their saliva than those who live primarily amid concrete, and that children <br />with attention deficits tend to concentrate and perform better on cognitive tests after walking through parks or arboretums. <br />But it had not been possible to study the brains of people while they were actually outside, moving through the city and the parks. At <br />least not until the recent development of a lightweight, portable version of the electroencephalogram, a technology that studies brain <br />wave patterns. <br />For the new study, published last month in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, researchers at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh <br />and the University of Edinburgh attached the portable EEGs to the scalps of 12 healthy young adults. The electrodes, hidden <br />beneath a fabric cap, sent brain wave readings wirelessly to a laptop carried in a backpack by each volunteer. <br />The researchers, who had studied the cognitive effect of green spaces for some time, sent each volunteer out on a walk of about a <br />mile and half that wound through three different sections of Edinburgh. <br />What they found confirmed the idea that green spaces lessen brain fatigue. <br />When the volunteers made their way through busy, urbanized areas, particularly the heavily trafficked district at the end of the walk, <br />their brain wave patterns consistently showed they were more aroused and frustrated than when they walked in the parkland, where <br />brain-wave readings became more meditative. <br /> <br />© 2011 Star Tribune <br />