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  • Thanks to WNET's Nature for supporting this episode.

  • Check out The Serengeti Rules on PBS and pbs.org/nature

  • and follow the career journey and discoveries of five pioneering ecologists!

  • According to fitness trackers and pedometers, peopleif possibleshould take

  • at least ten thousand steps each day to live a healthy lifestyle.

  • Butwhy?

  • I mean, I know exercise is good for you, but what's so special about ten thousand steps?

  • How did doctors and scientists figure out this was the perfect number for maintaining health and fitness?

  • Well, as it turns outthey didn't figure this out.

  • In reality, this nice, round number just isn't backed up by science.

  • As far as anyone can tell, this figure can be traced to the mid-1960s in Japan,

  • when the world's first wearable pedometer came out.

  • Its developers named their device Manpo-Kei, which translates toten thousand step meter.”

  • Then, they took advantage of the hype around the 1964 Tokyo Olympics to promote it.

  • Now, decades later, people are trying to walk this massive number of steps thanks to some ingenious marketing andnot much else

  • Because again, there's no conclusive evidence that ten thousand steps a day should be your ultimate health goal.

  • Instead, many studies suggest that how fast you movewhether you're walking or doing something elseis much more important.

  • Papers have shown that moderate or vigorous exercise is associated with fewer depression symptoms,

  • reduced feelings of anxiety, better sleep quality, higher bone strength, and more.

  • That explains why many public health guidelines recommend a certain amount of time for an activity like this, not a certain number of steps.

  • For example, the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans states that the average adult

  • should get a minimum of one hundred fifty minutes of moderate exercise or

  • seventy-five minutes of vigorous exercise each week.

  • If you really want to translate those guidelines into steps, though, you can do that.

  • Like, let's say you want to get in some moderate activity.

  • For an exercise to be considered this intensity, you need to burn at least three times the amount of energy you would at rest.

  • And research has shown that, for some adults, that's equivalent to walking at a pace of

  • about a hundred steps per minute, or roughly four kilometers per hour.

  • So to satisfy those U.S. guidelines, you'd need to walk around fifteen thousand steps

  • at this pace over the whole week, or approximately twenty-one hundred steps per day.

  • That number won't make your pedometer happy, but it will likely get your heart rate up.

  • This being said, though, don't worry if you can't get in those steps.

  • There are tons of other ways to exercise if walking a certain amount just isn't a possibility.

  • Like, there are plenty of people with mobility issues and disabilities that lead

  • healthy and active lives without keeping tabs on a step counter.

  • But in any case, if you can fit in some moderate or vigorous activity, your health will likely be better for it.

  • If you enjoyed watching this episode of SciShow, we've got something else you'll probably enjoy:

  • a new documentary from PBS Nature.

  • The film is called Nature: The Serengeti Rules, and it follows the story of five unsung heroes of modern ecology.

  • Beginning in the 1960s, these researchers headed out into the wilderness, driven by

  • an insatiable curiosity about how nature works.

  • And while they were immersed in some of the most spectacular places on Earth

  • like the Serengeti in Africathey discovered a single set of rules that governs all life

  • and offers hope for the fate of our planet.

  • In the documentary, the ecologists share the stories of their adventures, and how their

  • pioneering work on keystone species flipped our view of nature on its head.

  • This film premieres /tonight/ — that's October 9th, 2019 — at 8PM Eastern Time on PBS.

  • But if you're watching this video in the future, you can find it at pbs.org/nature

  • or on the PBS video app.

  • If you watch it, let us know what you think!

  • ♪♪♪

Thanks to WNET's Nature for supporting this episode.

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1日1万歩は必要ですか? (Do You Need 10,000 Steps a Day?)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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