“When children regularly run, swim, climb, etc., the brain learns to associate a rise in cortisol with something positive. The body’s reaction always has a cognitive component as well: this positive association helps to prevent the concentration of cortisol from rising to too high a level in exam situations as well,” said Sebastian Ludyga.
“Stress can interfere with thinking. Some of us are familiar with this in its most extreme form — a blackout,” Hanke explains.
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