Saturday, 4 November 2017

What beer can do for the brain?




What beer can do for the brain?
                                                                                Date 11-8-2017
From
Nalin Ranjan, Scientist

To
Society for Neuroscience

                     What is the cause for body to become cooler?
Sir,
      I am surprise to see an article titled as “Beer Helps overcome creative Block: Study” appeared in ‘The Times of India’ dated 10-8-2017 stating “Suffering a creative block? Drinking a pint of beer may trigger productivity and help you think out of the box for your artistic tasks, a study suggests. Scientists from the University of Graz in Austria found that people performed better in a range of creative tasks after drinking moderate amount of alcohol.
      In one word association test, a pint of beer for men, or around 350 millilitres (ml) for women, increased test scores by around 40%. In the test, participants were given three words that can be connected to each –for example, the word ‘pit’ can be attached to ‘peach’, ‘arm’ and ‘tar’. Alcohol helps remove parameters which surround a problem allowing more creative thought, researchers said.
     However, while alcohol boosted creativity it decreased ‘executive function’. This may impede tasks that require motor skills, such as painting or dancing.

I would like to put it in a more perspective way that people are doing well with the pint of chill beer enhancing hippocampus to play a vital role in storing memory but fail to boost the motor skills. This is because once you take a pint of chill beer metabolism changes in tandem with coolant particles inside the living cells of the hippocampus that generates energy on its own by the coolant action makes the brain active. Further, this coolant action has other side effect making the motor cells inefficient in boosting the oxygen level in the blood cells. As a result of this, motor cells impeds the task of dancing and painting skill prompted by the inactiveness of the dipole dipole force.
    In addition to this beer not only intoxicate the liver but also stimulates the auto motor cells of the esophagus and the stomach contraction and expansion changes the metabolism which is in tandem with coolant particles inside the living cell. In the process it lowers the blood flow by the action of the dipole dipole force which is nothing but Higgs Boson particle  in correlation with the coolant action it makes the body cooler.
    In this context drinking ice water doesn’t intoxicate the motor cells but it can quench your thirst not the kind of hibernation. Hibernation cannot be achieved through internal means. But extreme environmental chillness through skin can cause hibernation in some animals and fishes
    But, once you consume more than a bottle of beer it automatically intoxicates the cerebral cortex gradually gets affected by the coolant action in the hippocampus.   And if you continue to take more of chill beer, coolant action become more severe by this over dose it drastically knocks the motor cells leaving the body and the brain inebriate state.
   So beer has two extreme side effects either it improves the memory power and the other extreme it intoxicates leaving the body and the brain inebriate state.
    Let this beauty speak the true with beer.
By
     Nalin Ranjan
Brain Research Work

Foot Note :- More can be read from this Website titled as “Global Warming can bring a catastrophic disaster to all life” dated 31-1-2017 can be assessed from this Website


Copy of this report posted to Dr. Michio Kaku, Scientist from United States (California)” via ‘You Tube’ on 11-8-2017
Copy of this report posted to “Kings College London” on 11-8-2017
Copy of this report posted to “Centre for Neuroscience & Society- University of Pennsylvania” on 11-8-2017
Copy of this report posted to Dr. Neil Degrasse Tyson, Scientist from United States (New York) via You Tube’ on 11-8-17
Copy this report posted to Dr. Lawrence Krauss, Scientist from United States (California) via ‘You Tube’ on 11-8-2017
Copy of this report posted to “Cell Biology & Neuroscience” on 12-8-2017

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