The Huberman Lab Podcast discusses neuroscience: how our brain and its connections with the organs of our body control our perceptions, our behaviors, and our health. We also discuss existing and emerging tools for measuring and changing how our nervous system works. Dr. Andrew Huberman is a tenured Professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. His laboratory studies neural regeneration, neuroplasticity, and brain states such as stress, focus, fear, and optimal performance. For more than 20 years, Dr. Huberman has consistently published original research findings and review articles in top-level peer-reviewed journals, including Nature, Science, Cell, Neuron, and Current Biology. He is a regular member of several National Institutes of Health review panels and a Fellow of the McKnight Foundation and the Pew Charitable Trusts. Dr. Huberman regularly consults for technology development companies, professional athletic organizations, and various units of U.S. and Canadian Special Operations.
Supercharge Exercise Performance & Recovery with Cooling | Episode 19
This episode I explain the science of heating and cooling the body, a process called thermoregulation-- and how to apply that knowledge to significantly improve physical performance. I describe the three areas of our body that can remove heat (or bring heat into the body) faster than anywhere else, why that is so, and how proper cooling of these areas with specific protocols can allow people to perform 200-600% more volume and repetitions of resistance exercises at the same weight loads, or to run, cycle or swim significantly further. I also describe how to use directed cooling of so-called glabrous skin: the bottoms of feet, palms and face, to significantly enhance recovery times from exercise. Also, why the common practices of trying to heat up or cool the body via the torso or whole-body submersion in cold can be inefficient and/or dangerous-- and the better alternatives. Finally, I discuss the temperature-effects of caffeine, alcohol and anti-inflammatory compounds. The information in this episode is focused on mechanisms and tools for increasing athletic or exercise performance.
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Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 Introduction
- 00:05:08 Physical Performance & Skill Learning
- 00:06:40 Optimal Learning Protocol (Recap): 4 Steps
- 00:08:31 Variables Impacting Physical Performance
- 00:10:00 Temperature Is the Dominant Variable
- 00:12:08 Understanding Mechanism Is Key
- 00:13:42 Heat: The Enemy of All Performance (& Why)
- 00:16:30 Blood Flow & Sweating & Piloerection
- 00:22:35 Heat Is What Limits Effort: Even If You Feel Fine/Motivated
- 00:25:29 Proper Cooling Can Double, Triple, Quadruple (Or More) Your Ability
- 00:26:42 Heat Induced Confusion & Death
- 00:30:02 The Three Body Parts Best For Heating & Cooling Your Whole Body
- 00:31:38 Face, Palms, Bottoms of Feet; Glabrous Skin
- 00:33:00 Arterio-Venous Anastamoses (AVAs) Are Super Cool(ing)!
- 00:37:15 Palmar Cooling Can Supercharge Your Athletic Performance
- 00:38:35 ATP, Pyruvate Kinase & Heat
- 00:40:55 Palmer Cooling Outperforms Anabolic Steroids Several-Fold
- 00:43:45 Increasing Endurance, Willpower & Persistence
- 00:46:33 Cardiac Drift, & Moving the ”I Quit” Point
- 00:50:44 Deliberate Heating: Myths and Better Protocols
- 00:53:20 Protocols For Self-Directed Cooling To Vastly Improve Performance
- 00:59:23 How To Use Cold To Recover Faster & More Thoroughly
- 01:02:05 Ice Baths & Cold Showers Can Prevent Training Progress: mTOR, etc.
- 01:06:29 Alcohol, Caffeine, NSAIDs: Their Temperature Effects Matter
- 01:09:44 Are Stimulants Counter Productive For Performance? It Depends.
- 01:12:00 The Caffeine Rule & “Caffeine Adaptation”
- 01:14:20 NSAIDs for Training: Performance Enhancements & Risks
- 01:17:00 The Best Way to Explore Your Own “Parameter Space”
- 01:18:35 Tools: How To Try
- 01:21:35 Cost-Free Support, & Additional Support & Resources