Self-selected music extends workout endurance by nearly 20 percent

A new study finds that people who listen to their own choice of music during intense exercise can keep going almost 20 percent longer than when working out in silence. The research, involving cyclists, shows this boost comes without any increase in perceived effort or physical strain.

Twenty-nine recreationally active adults took part in the study, completing two high-intensity cycling tests at about 80 percent of their peak power output. In one session they rode in silence, while in the other they listened to tracks they had personally selected, most falling between 120 and 140 beats per minute. With music, participants averaged 35.6 minutes before reaching exhaustion, compared with 29.8 minutes without it, a difference the researchers described as a clear 20 percent gain in endurance.

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Study suggests 90–120 minutes of weekly strength training is linked to lower mortality risk

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About 90 to 120 minutes of strength (resistance) training a week was associated with the lowest long-term risk of death in an analysis of 147,374 U.S. adults followed for up to 30 years, with the biggest gains seen when strength work was combined with aerobic exercise, researchers report in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Just a few minutes of activity that leaves people out of breath each day was associated with substantially lower risks of developing eight major diseases and of dying over about seven years in a study of roughly 96,000 UK Biobank participants who wore wrist accelerometers for a week. The research, published March 30, 2026 in the European Heart Journal, suggests that how intensely people move may matter alongside how much they move.

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A study from Kyoto University has found that older adults who took up and continued playing a musical instrument maintained better memory and brain health over four years compared to those who stopped.

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