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Friday, December 22, 2006

Yntrodxkshxn tu Nuspelynh

No, that's not a quote from Cult Cthulhu. It reads 'Introduction to New Spelling' and the line between genius parody and stupidity is so blurred on this one, I'm not going to hazard a guess as to whether it's exclusively one or the other...

In Nuspelynh, each vowel has one sound. The letters c, q, and x are no longer needed as consonants, so we recycle them into vowels. c has the sound of short a, so it may be helpful to see the c as an a without a stem. q has the sound of short oo, so it may be helpful to see the q as a modified o. x has the sound of short u, so it may be useful to see the top half of the x as a very short u. The vowels a, e, i, o, and u have sounds like in other languages, including Spanish, Hawaiian, and Japanese.

The c is a vowel with the sound of short a except when it is followed by an h. The y is a vowel with the sound of short i except when it is followed by a vowel.

Thus, in Nuspelynh, 'book' becomes bqk. 'Casual' becomes kczhuxl. And 'undoubtedly' becomes the amazing xndcutydli. I mean, now that I see it in action, this all makes sense! Too bad there isn't another unnecessary letter in the English language: nuspelynh doesn't appear to have a hard 'a' sound. Maybe it should use an emoticon of a smiley face screaming or something.

Look, at the risk of seeming foolish if Nuspelynh is a parody, let me point this out: spelling reform that bases proper spelling upon pronunciation is an idea that is inherently flawed because people pronounce words differently. For example, Nuspelynh's founder spells father fadhxr... or as a homonym for "foddar." But I pronounce it with a clear theta sound, because I'm not fucking Fran Dreischer.

Monday, November 20, 2006

15 Super Coupes ( TheMrBeng motorshow 2006 )

Bloody motoshow2006 entrance fee $10 so ex. i'll have my own mini motorshow.
so people, heres it is:
________________________________________________________________

In the 105 years since cars went into mass production, coupes have been the sonnets of the auto industry--the medium in which the great designers and engineers use their best stuff, their most artful and heartfelt ideas. When you hear the words "beautiful car," chances are the image that pops into your head is not that of a minivan or pickup truck, but rather that of the classic car form, a coupe.


Lamborghini


______________________________________________________________



Best Coupe For under US$50,000
Porsche Cayman

Base Price: US$49,400
Engine: 2.7-liter, 245-horsepower 6-cylinder
Top speed: 160 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 5.8s
Beautiful and not in a love-it-or-hate-it way like BMW's Z4 M Coupe. We settled this category by erring on the racy, sporty side, not the side of luxury family cars--hence Cayman over BMW 3 Series or Infiniti G35.

_________________________________________________________________________

Best Psychotically Fast Coupe
SSC Ultimate Aero

Base Price: US$655,000
Engine: Turbocharged, 6.3-liter, 1,180-hp V-8
Top speed: 273 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 2.8 seconds

What's more fun than 1,180 horsepower? Stuffing 1,180 horsepower into a car that weighs as much as a Dodge Neon. The Aero's brakes had better be forged in Mordor.
________________________________________________________________________

Best American Supercar (tie)
Chevrolet Corvette Z06
Base Price: US$70,000
Engine: 7.0-liter, 505-hp V-8
Top speed: 198 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: n/a

The champion of the hottest-performance-for-the-bucks category. Permanent winner. Category retired.




_________________________________________________________________________

Best American Supercar (tie)
Dodge Viper SRT-10

Base Price: US$86,995
Engine: 8.3-liter, 510-hp V-10
Top speed: 190 miles per hour (estimated)
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: Under four seconds
Dodge recently started selling a Viper coupe too, apparently because the convertible wasn't hardcore enough.



_______________________________________________________________________

Coupe That Goes Beyond Beyond
Bugatti Veyron 16.4

Base Price: US$1.2 million
Engine: 8.0-liter, 1,001-hp 16-cylinder
Top speed: 253 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: Under 2.5 seconds
No car has ever been so famously over the top.

______________________________________________________________________

Best German Supercar

Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren
Base Price: US$452,750
Engine: Supercharged, 5.4-liter, 671-hp V-8
Top speed: 207 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 3.8 seconds

So civilized--literally the Mercedes-Benz of race cars.
________________________________________________________________________



Best British Supercar (tie)
Aston Martin DB9

Base Price: US$165,000
Engine: 5.9-liter, 450-hp V-12
Top speed: 186 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 4.7 seconds
Monstrous torque, the world's most authoritative exhaust note, gorgeous interior leather and wood, world-beating handling and as high-class a brand name as there is. What more do you want from a car?


_____________________________________________________________


Best British Supercar (tie)
Bentley Continental GT
Base Price: US$165,000
Engine: Turbocharged, 6.0-liter 12-cylinder
Top speed: 198 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 4.7 seconds
As potent as a freight train, as stately as a wood-paneled club room and as fast as a race car. Has already become an icon for success, taste and happiness.
__________________________________________________________________
Best Italian Supercar (tie)
Ferrari F430
Base Price: $168,000
Engine: 4.3-liter, 483-hp V-8
Top speed: Over 195 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 3.9 seconds
Unbelievable acceleration. High-revving engine emits banshee wail. World's most engaging steering? World's most engaging car? Spend more for Ferrari's 599 or 612 if you like; a car can't make you happier than an F430 can.
_________________________________________________________________
Best Italian Supercar (tie)
Lamborghini Murciélago LP640

Base Price: US$320,000
Engine: 6.5-liter, 632-hp V-12
Top speed: 211 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: Under 3.4 seconds
All you have to do is look at the Murciélago to know what it's capable of.



___________________________________________________________

Best New Arrival (tie)
Aston Martin V-8 Vantage

Base Price: US$110,000
Engine: 4.3-liter, 380-hp V-8
Top speed: 175 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 4.9 seconds
A sexy, fast and relatively affordable Aston. Not many cars scare Porsche. This one should.






_________________________________________________________________

Best New Arrival (tie)
BMW M6

Base Price: US$98,600
Engine: 5.0-liter, 500-hp V-10
Top speed: 155 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 4.5 seconds
Just awesome. A ten-cylinder, racing-style engine in a gorgeous coupe. For the moment, this is the ultimate BMW--and that's not a minor distinction.




_________________________________________________________________


Best New Arrival (tie)

Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano

Base Price: n/a
Engine: 6.0-liter, 620-hp V-12
Top speed: Over 205 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: Under 3.7 seconds
Missed out on the US$650,000 Enzo Ferrari supercar? The newest Ferrari has an Enzo-based engine. The 599 is made from Formula 1 technology, like all other Ferraris.



_______________________________________________________________

Best New Arrival (tie)
Porsche 911 Turbo
Base Price: US$122,900
Engine: Turbocharged, 3.6-liter, 480-hp six-cylinder
Top speed: 193 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 3.7 seconds

With a revolutionary, turbocharged engine, the 911 Turbo has blistering acceleration but can also be a steady family car for an hour or two if that's what you need.



_______________________________________________________________
Best New Luxury Coupe
Mercedes-Benz CL600
Base Price: n/a
Engine: 5.5-liter, 510-hp V-12
Top speed: 130 miles per hour
Zero-to-60 mph acceleration: 4.5 seconds (preliminary figure)

Mercedes' great, low-volume flagship coupe is back for a new generation. Among coupes, perhaps only Bentley's Continental GT rivals the CL for opulence.

Friday, November 17, 2006

http://www.spikedhumor.com/player/spiked_player.swf?file=http://www.spikedhumor.com/videocodes/66372/data.xml&auto_play=false" quality="high" scale="noscale" bgcolor="#000000" width="100%" height="100%" align="middle" allowScriptAccess="sameDomain" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" />

Thursday, November 16, 2006

25 Great Moments In Robotics History

1400 BC

Babylonians develop the clepsydra, a clock that measures time using the flow of water. It's considered one of the first "robotic" devices in history. For centuries, inventors will refine the design. Around 270 BC, the Greek inventor Ctesibius becomes famous for a water clock with moving figures on it.

322 BC

The Greek philosopher Aristotle imagines the great utility of robots, writing,
"If every tool, when ordered, or even of its own accord, could do the work that befits it … then there would be no need either of apprentices for the master workers or of slaves for the lords."

1495

Leonardo da Vinci designs a clockwork knight that will sit up, wave its arms and move its head and jaw. It's not certain whether the robot was ever built, but the design may constitute the first humanoid robot.

1737

French inventor Jacques de Vaucanson builds a clockwork duck capable of flapping its wings, quacking, eating and digesting food.

1769
Hungarian author and inventor Wolfgang von Kempelen builds "The Turk," a maplewood box with a mannequin, dressed in cloak and turban, protruding from the back. The device gains great fame as an automaton capable of playing chess against skilled opponents--until it is discovered that a human operator hides inside the box.

1801
French silk weaver and inventor Joseph Marie Jacquard invents an automated loom that is controlled by punch cards. Within a decade it is being mass-produced, and thousands are in use across Europe.


1881
Italian author Carlo Collodi writes Pinocchio, a children's book about a marionette who turns into a real boy. The literary theme of mechanical men who come to life will flourish along with the technological evolution of robots--most recently, in movies like Steven Spielberg's A.I. and in TV characters like Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation.

1900
L. Frank Baum invents one of the literary world's most beloved robots in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: the Tin Woodsman, a mechanical man in search of a heart. The character is seen as a symbol for the soullessness of mechanized industry.


1921
Czech playwright Karl Capek popularizes the term "robot" in a play called "R.U.R. (Rossums Universal Robot)." The word comes from the Czech robota, which means drudgery or forced work. The play ends with robots taking over the earth and destroying their makers.

1926

Film director Fritz Lang releases Metropolis, a silent film set in a futuristic urban dystopia. It features a female robot--the first to appear on the silver screen--who takes the shape of a human woman in order to destroy a labor movement.

1942

American science fiction author Isaac Asimov publishes a short story, "Runaround," that introduces the "Three Laws of Robotics"--rules that every robot is programmed to obey:

1. A robot may not harm a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.

2. A robot must obey the orders given to it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.

3. A robot must protect its own existence, as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

1954

Industrial robotics pioneer George Devol files a patent (pictured) for the first programmable robot and coins the term "universal automaton."

1956

George Devol and Joseph Engelberger (pictured) form the world's first robotics company, Unimation. In the 1960s, it is purchased by Condec, which later is bought, in part, by industrial manufacturing giant Eaton.

1959

The Servomechanisms Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology demonstrates computer-assisted manufacturing. A robotic milling machine creates a commemorative ashtray for each attendee.

1961

Unimate, the world's first industrial robot, goes to work on a General Motors assembly line.

1962

Rosie the robot appears on The Jetsons, an animated TV program about a family from the future. The iconic house maid becomes one of the best-known robot characters in recent history.

1966

The Artificial Intelligence Center at the Stanford Research Center begins development of Shakey, the first mobile robot. It is endowed with a limited ability to see and model its environment and is controlled by a computer that fills an entire room.

1968

HAL 9000 (Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic computer) appears in the Stanley Kubrick film 2001: A Space Odyssey, written by Arthur C. Clarke. The artificially intelligent computer runs the spaceship Discovery--and eventually goes berserk. The character reflects concern about the increasing power of intelligent machines over man.

1977

R2-D2 and C-3PO appear in George Lucas' Star Wars films. The plucky androids are arguably the best-known robots in modern culture.

1993

An eight-legged robot named Dante attempts to explore Antarctica's Mount Erebus volcano. It is remotely controlled from the U.S. and collects a small amount of data before mechanical difficulties end the experiment. But the landmark effort ushers in a new era of robotic exploration of hazardous environments.

1998

A fuzzy, batlike robot called Furby becomes the must-have toy of the holiday season. The US$30 toys "evolve" over time, first speaking in gibberish but soon developing the use of preprogrammed English phrases. More than 27 million of the toys sell in a 12-month period.

1999

Gadget lovers develop a serious case of puppy love for Sony's robot dog AIBO. The US$2,000 mechanical mutt can navigate around a room and respond to a set of limited commands.

2000

Honda's humanoid robot ASIMO steps onto the stage. Standing 1.3 meters tall, it can walk and run with a near-human gait.

2002

The Roomba robotic vacuum from the iRobot Corp. is released. The Frisbee-shaped device has sold over 2 million units to date, making it the most commercially successful domestic robot in history.

2004

The robotics business hits the big time, becoming a US$1.06 billion business in North America. Pictured is the humanoid robot Speecys SPC-003.

Mitsubishi to Release Air Conditioners with Human Location Sensing Capability

Nov 07, 2006 16:36
Motonobu Kawai, Nikkei Electronics & Chikara Nakayama, Nikkei Monozukuri

Mitsubishi's air conditioner able to sense human location


From mid December 2006, Mitsubishi Electric Corp. will launch seven models in series from its "ZW series" air conditioner lineup for home use. The series enhanced energy saving efficiency and user's comfort based on a system that controls air conditioning in light of human location in the room. The company introduced its first "Kirigamine" air conditioner product in 1967. As "products integrating 40 years' history of our Kirigamine" (Mitsubishi), the new lineup features auto cleaning capability for filters and outlet fans and compact size with the width of an indoor unit reduced to less than 800 mm.

The air conditioners detect human location with an infrared sensor unit called "Human Sensor Move Eye." This unit is attached downward in the middle of an indoor unit's bottom face and automatically moves between left and right. It takes about one minute for the sensor unit to go back and forth between a range of 160 degrees wide. Through this move, the sensor unit measures temperature of the room's floor and wall.

The company's previous products also featured similar sensors to measure temperature of the floor, but they only could analyze the room's temperature distribution by a total of six areas using two infrared sensors, each of which watches over three areas. With the new Human Sensor Move Eye system, a row of seven infrared sensors scans inside the room and each sensor acquires temperature data by dividing its coverage area into 66 segments. In other words, the system can acquire temperature data from about 500 segments.
Infrared sensor unit. It screens the room horizontally and measures temperature distribution by dividing the whole room into 500 areas.

Given the capability to divide the room into small pieces and measure temperature in detail, the new system can precisely sense the size and move of heat sources. "The unit recognizes a human with its high temperature as well as its move of more than 30 cm" (Mitsubishi). Therefore, the sensor does not consider kitchen and other fixed heat sources as humans. However, Mitsubishi said the sensor can maintain its recognition of a human as long as its temperature remains high, even if the object stops moving after being sensed.

In this manner, the new air conditioners locate humans, centralize the area of air conditioning to the location of a man and automatically switch to economic mode when no one is sensed inside the room, for example. The system can save up to 50% of power, combining 10% by integrating air conditioning area to the human location and 10% by switching to economic mode when nobody is in the room, along with existing energy saving effect (about 30%) by weakening air conditioning in line with floor temperature.

The lineup can cope with the situation where there are two people at a time inside the room by moving each of upper, lower, left and right flaps at its air outlet using four separate motors. On the other hand, the lineup can also control air not to directly hit people in the room. It also features a capability to analyze trends of human location in each family, based on results of its survey for about half a month. The current model only controls the direction of air when starting operation based on past data saved by the company. Mitsubishi intends to "further boost the precision of human location sensing in the future, using data we have accumulated."

Monday, November 13, 2006

thanks ah

ya. vote vote vote. vote for the best party.
and what u get? Transport fare hikes. blah blah blah..
and even better news. GST increases nxt yr!
yeah vote for the best party. pay the price for it.
come on. its 'worth' every cent. u r paying for 'world-class' gahmen.
get it?

lets wait and see what else they'll up in future. dammnit!

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Free Hugs Campaign. Inspiring Story!

Sometimes, a hug is all what we need. Free hugs is a real life controversial story of Juan Mann, A man whos sole mission was to reach out and hug a stranger to brighten up their lives.

In this age of social disconnectivity and lack of human contact, the effects of the Free Hugs campaign became phenomenal.

As this symbol of human hope spread accross the city, police and officials ordered the Free Hugs campaign BANNED. What we then witness is the true spirit of humanity come together in what can only be described as awe inspiring.

In the Spirit of the free hugs campaign, PASS THIS TO A FRIEND and HUG A STRANGER! After all, If you can reach just one person...

PS. The response to this video has been nothing short of overwhelming and touching. Hugs to every single one of you who messaged. There has been thousands of emails from all over the world by people seeking to participate in the Free Hugs campaign and asking for permission. You do not need permission. This is the peoples movement, this is *your* movement. With nothing but your bare hands you can make THE difference.

Imagine all the people.

http://www.freehugscampaign

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

How did popcorn become a popular snack at movie theaters?

Read this fron Ask Yahoo

Dear Yahoo!:
How did popcorn become a popular snack at movie theaters?

RoxannNorth Braddock, Pennsylvania

Dear Roxann:
No trip to the movies is complete without an overpriced tub of popcorn covered in goo. Good thing, 'cause popcorn sales are responsible for a substantial portion of theater profits.
To learn how the tradition began, we first consulted the Encyclopedia Popcornica. According to this industry-supported site, the salty snack was very popular "from the 1890s until the Great Depression." Even during the Depression, popcorn remained "one of the few luxuries down-and-out families could afford."
Kidz World writes that popcorn first became available at movie theaters way back in 1912. They don't explain why, but Buzzle.com came through with many kernels of truth (none of which remained unpopped).
Apparently back in the old days, popcorn vendors would "set up shop" outside theaters. The theater managers didn't like this, thinking it was a distraction. But moviegoers disagreed, frequently ducking out to buy popcorn and then ducking back in to see the movie.
As Buzzle further notes, "it wasn't long until the theatre owners realized they could set up their own popcorn popper." That's exactly what they did, and popcorn's been associated with movies ever since. Kind of like Cracker Jacks and baseball games or gruel and orphanages.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

iamscruelty.com

For nearly 10 months in 2002 and early 2003, a PETA investigator went undercover at an Iams contract testing laboratory and discovered a dark and sordid secret beneath the wholesome image of the dog- and cat-food manufacturer: dogs gone crazy from intense confinement to barren steel cages and cement cells, dogs left piled on a filthy paint-chipped floor after having chunks of muscle hacked from their thighs; dogs surgically debarked; horribly sick dogs and cats languishing in their cages, neglected and left to suffer with no veterinary care.

Iams lied to PETA with promises to improve the conditions for animals in its contract laboratories, even assuring us that enrichment programs were already in place, but our undercover investigator saw otherwise. She fought for six months to have a single cheap, rubber toy placed in each cold, lonely kennel. This is Iams’ idea of enrichment.

Our video footage shows Iams representatives touring the facility and witnessing dogs’ endless circling in barren cells, sweltering in the summer heat. Iams knew the truth yet did nothing to protect the animals.

The dogs and cats in Iams’ tests are no different from our dogs and cats at home when it comes to deserving companionship, play, a stimulating environment, and the right not to be tormented in painful experiments.

Luckily, caring consumers know that advances in nutrition don’t have to come at the expense of animals in labs. Help PETA force Iams to end these painful and unnecessary tests, as many compassionate companies have already done.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

你的女友在你心中值多少钱

  我们每个人平常坚守的很多理念、信仰,包括对爱情的忠贞,在金钱面前,到底会朝天平的哪一方倾斜呢?或许看了下面这个测试后,你会有所启迪。

  女主持人气势咄咄的问一个男嘉宾,你为什么那么在乎钱,男嘉宾说:“钱能买到一切!”

  现场的观众哗然了。

  男嘉宾微笑的说:“我们做个测试吧。”

  一个很简单的主题,你的一个仇人爱上了你的女友,现在想要你退出,你是一个正常的人,你爱自己的女友。那个男人愿意出一点钱来补偿你。

  所有的观众都很不屑这种论调,男人缓缓的开出了第一个价格“五万!”

  现场的观众松了口气,论点很集中:“五万,简直是瞧不起人,为了五万放弃了爱情?更主要的是放弃了自己的人格”所有的人都不约而同的否定了。

  男人接着开出了第二个价格“五十万!”

  现场的声音小了很多,一部分的人开始自己的计算了,在过了好大的一会儿,绝大多数的男人依然选择了否定,他身边的女友感动的看着他。只有少数的人接受了这五十万,其中的一个人说:“自己没有钱,父母苦了一辈子了,临老了生病没钱医治,为了父母,放弃了爱情吧。”

  男人接着开出了第三个价格“五百万!”

  现场更静了,男人的第一个动作都是看身边的女人,也许是在权衡什么。

  一半的男人沉默了,另一半的男人怯生生的说:“我要爱情。”身边的女友也有点呆住了,一个女孩子站起来说:“如果一个男人肯出五百万,我想我没有理由拒绝他。”沉默的男人选择了金钱,五百万可以买一套房子,一部车子,全家过上好日子,甚至可以开始自己的事业。

  一个男人说:“他是我的仇人,我有了这个五百万,我可以含辛茹苦,我可以报仇,我可以计划我所有的未来,当个真正主宰自己的男人。”一些女人看着身边的男人,若有所思。

  男人接着开出了第四个价格“五千万!”

  全场哗然了,对于大多数的人,一辈子也挣不了这许多。

  女人说:“有肯为我一掷五千万的男人,他一定是爱我的,这样有钱又专一的男人,为什么不选择呢。”

  一个男人举手:“他真的肯付五千万?”在得到肯定的回答后,男人说:“爱情是无价的,但是我没有这个能力去照顾爱人,别人有,我应该放弃,并且我有了这许多的钱,我可以做很多有意义的事情,我可以成就事业,我可以帮助别人,这样的人生才有意义。”所有的人都深以为然。

  只有一个人依然选择了放弃,所有的人都用很奇怪的目光看他,他解释到:“我的爱情是无价的”,当问到他的女友是否感动的时候,女友说:“我虽然感动,但我更感动的是为了我付出自己五千万的人,而不是放弃别人的五千万,他的观点很可敬,但不现实。”

  嘉宾笑了笑,你们所有的人都选择了金钱。

  那个人还是以前的那个人,他的为人和评价只是因为钱?

  钱多就高尚了。所有无价的都是都是跟钱比较的,博物馆里的国宝,有钱了可以买,买不到了可以雇人偷和抢,再不行的话,可以发动战争,只要你有足够的钱。

  美国打伊拉克需要的是什么,钱;使用的是什么,还是钱,不过是一个以钱换钱的游戏罢了。

  所有的观众愕然了,想起自己的生活。

  想跳槽的时候,借口都不是钱,但都有一个理由:“我不在乎钱,但是我在乎工资,这代表我是否受尊重和我的价值。”是啊,相同的工作,一千块就侮辱了你,一万块就是尊重你,十次的侮辱等于尊重?

  嘉宾说,我不想解释为量变导致质变,爱情的质变不是钱多钱少的问题,而是,在你们之间叫的爱情如果通过交换就不叫了爱情。所以他拿钱换走的不是爱情,而是你的所有权,爱情已经走了,它依然无价!变质的爱情怎么还能叫爱情?

  所有的人性都有价格,而又无价,当你用金钱换取的时候,人性已经丢掉了,你售卖的价格已经和你原有的人性无关。

  嘉宾最后说了一句,我相信爱情,相信所有的人性,所以我努力的挣钱、爱钱。我只是不希望我的爱情和人性受到别人的金钱的考验罢了。

  看过别人的选择后,假想一下,如果你也遇到了同样的问题,也需要你做这样的选择,你会在第几步“卖掉”自己的女友呢?还是选择“无价”?

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Fitness, childhood IQ may affect old-age brain function

Oct. 9, 2006
Courtesy American Academy of Neurology and World Science staff

How well your mind works in old age de­pends more on your fit­ness than on your IQ as a child, ac­cord­ing to a study in the Oct. 10 is­sue of the re­search jour­nal Neu­rol­o­gy.

Cour­te­sy City of Se­at­tle Ag­ing & Dis­a­bil­i­ty Ser­vic­es



In the re­search, 460 adults took a cog­ni­tive test at age 79 iden­ti­cal to one they had tak­en de­c­ades ago, at age 11, in a study called the Scot­tish Men­tal Sur­vey.

Re­sults showed phys­i­cal fit­ness con­tri­bu­t­ed more than three per­cent of the dif­fer­en­ces in old-age cog­ni­tive abil­i­ty, af­ter ac­count­ing for child­hood test scores, said study au­thor Ian Dea­ry of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ed­in­burgh in Scot­land.

Fit­ness en­hanced old-age cog­ni­tive abil­i­ty more than child­hood IQ did, he added. “Thus, two peo­ple start­ing out with the same IQ at age 11, the fit­ter per­son at age 79 will, on av­er­age, have bet­ter cog­ni­tive func­tion.”

Fit­ness was de­fined by the time it took to walk six me­ters, grip strength and lung func­tion.

“The oth­er re­mark­a­ble re­sult,” said Dear­y, was that “par­tic­i­pants with a high IQ as a child were more like­ly to have bet­ter lung func­tion at age 79. This could be be­cause peo­ple with higher in­tel­li­gence might re­spond more fa­vor­a­bly to health mes­sages about stay­ing fit.”

Oc­cu­pa­tion and educa­tion were also as­so­ci­at­ed with old-age fit­ness, he added; bet­ter-ed­u­ca­ted peo­ple in more pro­fes­sion­al ca­reers had bet­ter fit­ness and higher men­tal test scores.