Neymar brain on auto-pilot: Neurologists
BY Agencies27 July 2014 4:37 AM IST
Agencies27 July 2014 4:37 AM IST
Brazilian superstar Neymar’s brain activity while dancing past opponents is less than 10 per cent the level of amateur players, suggesting he plays as if on auto-pilot, according to Japanese neurologists.
Results of brain scans conducted on Neymar in February this year indicated minimal cerebral function when he rotated his ankle and point to the Barcelona striker’s wizardry being uncannily natural.
‘From MRI images we discovered Neymar’s brain activity to be less than 10 percent of an amateur player. It is possible genetics is a factor, aided by the type of training he does,’ researcher Eiichi Naito said on Friday. The findings were published in the Swiss journal Frontiers in Human Neuroscience following a series of motor skills tests carried out on the 22-year-old Neymar and several other athletes in Barcelona in February this year.
Three Spanish second-division footballers and two top-level swimmers were also subjected to the same tests, added Naito of Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology. Naito concluded in his paper the test results ‘provide valuable evidence that the football brain of Neymar recruits very limited neural resources in the motor-cortical foot regions during foot movements’.
Results of brain scans conducted on Neymar in February this year indicated minimal cerebral function when he rotated his ankle and point to the Barcelona striker’s wizardry being uncannily natural.
‘From MRI images we discovered Neymar’s brain activity to be less than 10 percent of an amateur player. It is possible genetics is a factor, aided by the type of training he does,’ researcher Eiichi Naito said on Friday. The findings were published in the Swiss journal Frontiers in Human Neuroscience following a series of motor skills tests carried out on the 22-year-old Neymar and several other athletes in Barcelona in February this year.
Three Spanish second-division footballers and two top-level swimmers were also subjected to the same tests, added Naito of Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology. Naito concluded in his paper the test results ‘provide valuable evidence that the football brain of Neymar recruits very limited neural resources in the motor-cortical foot regions during foot movements’.
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