Sex makes you smarter, but pornography could be harmful

Travel, tourism and real sex may have common grounds and could make your vacation even more exciting and fun.

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Travel, tourism and real sex may have common grounds and could make your vacation even more exciting and fun. Forget mindfulness meditation, computerized working-memory training, and learning a musical instrument; all methods recently shown by scientists to increase intelligence. There could be an easier answer. It turns out that sex might actually make you smarter.

Researchers in Maryland and South Korea recently found that sexual activity in mice and rats improves mental performance and increases neurogenesis (the production of new neurons) in the hippocampus, where long-term memories are formed.

In April, a team from the University of Maryland reported that middle-aged rats permitted to engage in sex showed signs of improved cognitive function and hippocampal function. In November, a group from Konkuk University in Seoul concluded that sexual activity counteracts the memory-robbing effects of chronic stress in mice. โ€œSexual interaction could be helpful,โ€ they wrote, โ€œfor buffering adult hippocampal neurogenesis and recognition memory function against the suppressive actions of chronic stress.โ€

In April, a team from the University of Maryland reported that middle-aged rats permitted to engage in sex showed signs of improved cognitive function and hippocampal function. In November, a group from Konkuk University in Seoul concluded that sexual activity counteracts the memory-robbing effects of chronic stress in mice. โ€œSexual interaction could be helpful,โ€ they wrote, โ€œfor buffering adult hippocampal neurogenesis and recognition memory function against the suppressive actions of chronic stress.โ€

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WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • In April, a team from the University of Maryland reported that middle-aged rats permitted to engage in sex showed signs of improved cognitive function and hippocampal function.
  • In April, a team from the University of Maryland reported that middle-aged rats permitted to engage in sex showed signs of improved cognitive function and hippocampal function.
  • In November, a group from Konkuk University in Seoul concluded that sexual activity counteracts the memory-robbing effects of chronic stress in mice.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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