Birders
Related: About this forumBecoming an Expert Birder Can Reshape Your Brain and Might Help Protect It From Aging, New Research Suggests
Compared to novices, seasoned birders had denser, more structurally complex brain regions involved with tasks like object identification, visual processing, attention and working memory
Sarah Kuta - Daily Correspondent

Becoming an expert birder might support brain health, according to a new study. Pexels
Bird-watching is a popular pastime enjoyed by more than a third of American adults. Many people love the hobby because it helps them connect with nature, sharpen their observation skills and connect with others.
This peaceful activity may come with yet another benefit: supporting brain health. According to a paper published in the March 25 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, birding might reshape the brain and could help protect it from some of the effects of aging.
Learning a new skill can cause the brain to reorganize itself as it forms new pathways and strengthens existing ones. Scientists have studied this phenomenon, known as neuroplasticity, in the brains of highly skilled experts who have devoted time and energy to mastering their craft, such as musicians and athletes.
Our brains are very malleable, says lead author Erik Wing, a neuroscientist at York University in Canada who conducted the research while at the countrys Baycrest Academy for Research and Education, to NBC News Lindsey Leake.
Wing and his colleagues wondered whether birding expertise might also cause changes in the brain. Becoming an expert birder requires a wide range of cognitive processes and skills, such as fine-grain identification, visual search and attention to the immediate environment and sensitivity to motion, pattern detection, building these elaborate conceptual networks of different related species, Wing tells NBC News. Also, you have to remember what youre seeing and compare it to these internal templates.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/becoming-an-expert-birder-can-reshape-your-brain-and-might-help-protect-it-from-aging-new-research-suggests-180988489/

Erik Wing, Ph.D.
https://www.gilboalab.ca/people.html
Skittles
(171,881 posts)I am fascinated by both birds and birders - maybe I should look into it
gademocrat7
(11,958 posts)We have a variety of birds that visit daily. They keep me busy replenishing the feeders.
Looking forward to the arrival of the Ruby throated humming birds.
AllyCat
(18,867 posts)In these little (and big) wonders of our world!
Not that I needed to be validated but this is interesting and a great perk!
Easterncedar
(6,313 posts)Non-expert birdwatching has been an interest all my life. Its a pleasant way to interact with the world - the human as well as avian creatures and all the nature that surrounds us.
2naSalit
(103,032 posts)I wonder what that says about wildlife watchers in general. Some of us are way beyond just birding because around those birds are many other species.
Thank you, Judi, for posting!
Alice Kramden
(2,952 posts)Thanks for posting!