Nature Is Medicine. But What’s the Right Dose?

“Their tagline is ‘delivering technology to assess and promote nature exposure,’ and their initial vision was an app that would keep track of how much time you spend in natural environments.”

Source: Outside
Published: Sep 14, 2021
Length: 13 minutes (3,277 words)

How the Nike Vaporfly War Was Lost

The debate about the Nike Vaporfly trainers has highlighted ongoing issues around technology in footwear.

Source: Outside
Published: Feb 4, 2020
Length: 14 minutes (3,638 words)

The Race Against Time

Does our body tell us when we can’t go any farther, or does our brain? A look at marathon runners and the science behind human endurance.

“A classic situation in which athletes believe they have hit a true physical limit is ‘bonking’ during a marathon: you stagger to a halt, ostensibly because your body runs out of carbohydrates. When Noakes started running in the 1970s, the standard advice was to drink only water during long races. Then, in the late stages of a sixty-four-kilometre race one year, he tried a few spoonfuls of corn syrup. ‘Five minutes later, I just started running. I finished that race faster than I ever finished,’ he recalls. ‘It was like the brain released something.” The discovery led to the first external funding (‘a thousand rand in a brown paper packet,’ he says) for his nascent sports science lab, to study the effects of corn syrup on participants in South Africa’s Stellenbosch marathon.

“The fact that the corn syrup worked seems to support the idea that the body is limited by its finite store of carbohydrates. But it almost worked too well, and Noakes began to question whether carbohydrates could even reach the muscles that quickly. Sure enough, recent experiments in Britain have shown that your brain picks up the presence of carbohydrates in your mouth via previously unknown sensors, anticipates that fuel is headed to your muscles, and allows you to go a bit faster — even if you trick it by spitting out the carbs rather than swallowing them to replenish your muscles.”

Source: Walrus Magazine
Published: Jun 20, 2012
Length: 21 minutes (5,442 words)

Global Impositioning Systems

Is GPS technology actually harming our sense of direction?

Source: Walrus Magazine
Published: Nov 1, 2009
Length: 16 minutes (4,151 words)