Samstag, 17. Dezember 2011

Could a treadmill desk save your life?

Our sedentary, office-bound lives are slowly killing us. Luckily, one British scientist thinks he has the answer. But will the ‘treadmill desk’ catch on?

andra Hooks (right), clicks her mouse and talks on the phone all while walking on a treadmill Friday morning. Also on a treadmill is Kirk Hurley (left). Mutual of Omaha has 4 Walkstations in their customer-service area.
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andra Hooks (right), clicks her mouse and talks on the phone all while walking on a treadmill Friday morning. Also on a treadmill is Kirk Hurley (left). Mutual of Omaha has 4 Walkstations in their customer-service area.  Photo: Chris Machian/The New York Times/Redux






In 2006, James Levine, a British scientist based at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, conducted a very strange experiment. He wanted to measure something which goes by the cumbersome title of Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis – or NEAT. Essentially, this examines how people move about during an average day – not when they’re exercising, but when they’re making no special effort to keep fit.
The big problem was just how to do the measuring – and here Levine hit upon a radical plan.......read on



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