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Run, jump, learn: how exercise can transform our schools| John J. Ratey, MD |TEDxManhattanBeach

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    In the spirit of disruption,
    I'm going to be a little disruptive.
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    So, I want you all to stand up.
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    Please, everybody, stand up.
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    We're going to do an exercise
    that's called the Hindu squats,
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    and I guarantee you that no one here -
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    well, maybe I should ask,
    Has anyone ever heard of a Hindu squat?
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    Oh, there are a few.
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    Well, I had spoken
    in Mumbai, India, to 500 Hindus,
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    and no one had heard of it, so ...
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    (Laughter)
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    But it's good you have.
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    So anyway, put your hands
    right out in front of you,
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    and pull them back real tight,
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    and then bend down and touch the floor
    or just sit on the seat there.
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    Yeah. Okay.
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    Now, once again. Let's do it again.
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    Bring it in and then down here.
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    Now, when we bring it in,
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    I want you to go, "Boom!"
    and then come down like that.
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    Okay, really loud.
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    (Audience) Boom!
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    And then go down, and touch the floor.
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    Then, "Boom!" go down,
    and touch the floor,
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    and then, "Boom!" and go down,
    and touch the floor,
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    and then, "Boom!" and go down,
    and touch the floor.
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    One more time. "Boom!"
    and go down, and touch the floor.
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    Okay.
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    Great, now you can be seated.
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    Now your brains are ready to learn.
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    (Laughter)
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    And what I'm going to talk
    to you today about
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    is how exercise is really for our brains,
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    physical exercise turns our brains on,
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    and all the wonderful side effects
    that we get help our body be healthy.
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    I first learned
    about the power of exercise
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    when I was doing my residency
    in psychiatry in Boston
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    at the time of the Boston Marathon's
    explosion with Bill Rodgers,
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    and everybody in Boston was running.
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    We began to see patients
    who had to stop running
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    for the first time
    in their lives with an injury.
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    First thing that happened
    they got depressed.
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    Then I began to see some people
    come in and say,
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    "Look, I can no longer pay attention,"
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    "I can no longer plan well,"
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    "I am procrastinating
    for the first time in my life."
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    And these were professors
    from MIT and Harvard and industry leaders
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    that had never experienced what we
    now call attention deficit disorder,
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    but they were self-medicating
    with their daily exercise.
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    And this changed
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    and led me to be interested in exercise
    as a treatment for a lot of disorders.
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    We knew, from the time of Hippocrates,
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    that exercise was a good
    treatment for depression,
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    and I began to say that a bout of exercise
    was like taking a little bit of Prozac
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    and a little bit of Ritalin.
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    (Laughter)
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    This was solidified some years later
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    when a study came out of
    Duke University Medical School,
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    who had been really onto this whole thing
    of exercise making our emotions better,
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    improving our depression,
    improving anxiety,
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    improving our aggression.
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    But they did this study,
    looking at 100 patients who came into Duke
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    and divided them into
    three different groups.
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    All these people were sedentary.
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    The first group they started on Zoloft,
    increasing doses of Zoloft.
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    The next group they put into an exercise
    program four times a week for 30 minutes,
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    and the third group,
    they did both medicine and exercise.
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    What they found after four weeks
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    is that all their depressive scores
    dropped to the same level,
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    and at the end of the fourth month,
    which is how long the experiment went,
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    the changes had remained.
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    And so, this kept me interested
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    in exercise as a treatment,
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    but then I learned about this school
    in Naperville, Illinois, in 2003
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    that led me to write my book "Spark,"
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    which has given me the purpose and mission
    of changing our education system,
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    bringing back play and exercise
    as a treatment modality
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    or as a stimulant modality
    for all of our kids and all of us.
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    Naperville had 19,000 students,
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    and they had evolved,
    over a 20-year-period,
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    this wonderful PE program
    that was fitness-based,
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    and it was everyday.
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    So, the kids were spending 45 minutes
    all of them moving and grooving.
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    What got them national recognition
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    is that three percent
    of their children were overweight,
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    and it was at time
    when 33% of our kids were overweight.
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    In 7,500 children in the high school,
    there was not an obese child to be found.
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    Remarkable,
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    but what really got me
    on an airplane to go there
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    was that some years before,
    they had taken the TIMSS tests,
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    the international science and math test
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    that every country takes every three years
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    to see how they're doing
    in science and math,
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    and the US is usually
    in the low- to mid-teens.
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    And they took it as a country,
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    and they came in number one
    in the world in science
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    and number six in math.
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    So, I jumped on an airplane, went there,
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    and began to put together
    the science of exercise and its effect
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    not only for mental health issues
    but for cognition.
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    We began to take this idea
    to other schools,
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    went to an inner-city school
    in Charleston, South Carolina,
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    where they had no resources:
    one gymnasium, one PE teacher.
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    She set up eight
    different stations in the gym,
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    had her fourth- to eighth-graders
    come in every morning for 30 minutes,
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    had them play basketball one station
    double Dutch jump rope in another,
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    pogo stick, hula hoops.
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    They kept rotating,
    so the novelty was there.
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    What they found in the first four months
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    was a 83% drop in discipline problems.
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    Now, it wasn't just burning off energy.
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    What they were doing
    is they were turning their brains on.
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    We worked with another school
    up in Northern Ontario -
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    the high school -
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    where they had a special class
    for their 25 bad boys.
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    They were very disruptive in a bad way,
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    and one of the things that they had to do
    was to suspend these children
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    if they were in fights, breaking furniture
    or just disrupting the class too much.
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    So, we went in and helped them
    design a program
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    to get all these kids moving
    and moving vigorously in the morning.
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    And so, what you can see on the graph here
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    is that the semester before, they had
    95 days of suspension of these children.
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    After we started the program,
    it dropped to five.
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    Then, as well, the attendance went up.
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    So, these kids came to school -
    and these were rough kids -
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    came to school to get their credits,
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    to finish their courses,
    to participate in schools.
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    Now, what happens when we exercise
    is we turn on our front part of the brain,
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    the last part of the brain to evolve.
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    This is a part of the brain
    that's called our CEO of the brain
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    or prefrontal cortex,
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    where our frontal executive functions are,
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    and when we exercise, when we move,
    we turn that part of the brain on.
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    As well, we create
    a lot of neurotransmitters
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    that we aim at with our psychiatric drugs,
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    and we create another substance
    that we had just learned about called BDNF
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    or brain-derived neurotrophic factor,
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    which I called Miracle-Gro for the brain
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    because when we fire our nerve cell,
    we make this stuff,
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    and this keeps our brain cells
    young and perky -
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    one of the reasons why exercise
    is one of the best ways to prevent
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    the onset of cognitive decline
    and Alzheimer's disease -
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    but it also readies
    our brain to be plastic.
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    And we know we need
    to have our brain cells grow
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    to log in any new information.
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    So, exercise is a terrific way
    to improve the learner
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    because it turns on the attention system,
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    it turns on the motivation system,
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    it turns on the memory system,
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    as well as it makes all of our little
    brain cells ready to grow and sprout,
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    and that's the only way we learn anything.
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    Here in California, for the past 12 years,
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    you've tested a million children
    in grades five, seven and nine every year.
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    This is a representative graph
    of what it looks like.
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    They evaluate them
    on six different fitness standards.
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    And the graph shows as more and more
    standards are completed,
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    that is they achieve them,
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    their test scores -
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    in this case it's math,
    but it's the same in language, arts -
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    their test scores go up,
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    and this is what you see
    in every single year.
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    So, the more fit the child is,
    the better learner they are.
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    So, my purpose, my mission
    is to go around the country and the world
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    to tell people, "Look,
    exercise makes your brain better,
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    it optimizes your
    brain's ability to learn,
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    it helps regulate your emotions,
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    it improves your motivation,
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    and it's something
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    that we have unfortunately
    been taking out of our schools."
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    We need to reinvigorate our schools
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    and get our kids out of
    their seats and moving.
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    So, thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Run, jump, learn: how exercise can transform our schools| John J. Ratey, MD |TEDxManhattanBeach
Description:

While exercise is good for the body, Dr. John J. Ratey, MD, argues it is more important for the brain, especially when it comes to students in the classroom. Citing scientific studies and real world examples, this internationally recognized expert in the brain-exercise connection demonstrates how we can raise test scores, lower behavioral problems and help the overall well-being of today's students with fitness based physical education.

John J. Ratey, MD, is an associate clinical professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, research synthesizer, speaker and best-selling author. He has published over 60 peer-reviewed articles and seven books, including "A Users Guide to the Brain," and the groundbreaking "Driven to Distraction" series with Ned Hallowell, MD. John's latest book is "Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain." (http://www.amazon.com/Spark-Revolutionary-Science-Exercise-Brain/dp/0316113506)

Dr. Ratey has embarked on a world-wide mission to re-engineer schools, corporations and individual lifestyle practices by incorporating exercise to achieve peak performance and optimum mental health. Consistently named one of the Best Doctors in America by his peers, Dr. Ratey serves as Reebok's Ambassador for Active Kids, is an Advisor to the California Governor's Council on Physical Fitness Activity and Sport, and is an adjunct professor at Taiwan National Sports University. Dr. Ratey maintains a private practice in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and is currently working on a book examining our genetic roots and the influence on our psychology in a modern world, to be published by Little Brown in 2013. More information http://www.johnratey.com

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
10:44

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