Improving Immunity Based on Traditional Eastern Exercises

Coursera Courses ↗ · Coursera

Open Course on Coursera

Free to audit · Opens on Coursera

Improving Immunity Based on Traditional Eastern Exercises

Coursera · Advanced ·📄 Research Papers Explained ·1mo ago
Exercise is medicine. Regular and moderate exercise can effectively strengthen immune system so as to reduce the risk of virus infection and also improve or assist in the treatment of dysthymic disorders like anxiety and depression. This course provides suggestions for the general public about how to actively respond to the outbreak of novel coronavirus. It also explains: how the immune system reacts when viruses invade into the body; why exercises can enhance immunity and what is the mechanism; what the difference is between western sports and traditional eastern exercises. Besides, the course includes training lessons on Baduanjin, Zhanzhuang, Daoyin, Yoga and other exercises conducive to immunity improvement. This course is characteristic for its combination of physical education and medicine, so the course will be taught by experts in either sports or medicine. The teaching content covers both disciplinary theory and specific training method, showcasing the unique culture and charm of the East while conducting cross-cultural communication as well as sharing the wisdom of traditional exercises and modern research and application in this regard.
Watch on Coursera ↗ (saves to browser)
Sign in to unlock AI tutor explanation · ⚡30

Related AI Lessons

The ABCs of reading medical research and review papers these days
Learn to critically evaluate medical research papers by accepting nothing at face value, believing no one blindly, and checking everything
Medium · LLM
#1 DevLog Meta-research: I Got Tired of Tab Chaos While Reading Research Papers.
Learn to manage research paper tabs efficiently and apply meta-research techniques to improve productivity
Dev.to AI
How to Set Up a Karpathy-Style Wiki for Your Research Field
Learn to set up a Karpathy-style wiki for your research field to organize and share knowledge effectively
Medium · AI
The Non-Optimality of Scientific Knowledge: Path Dependence, Lock-In, and The Local Minimum Trap
Scientific knowledge may be stuck in a local minimum, hindering optimal progress, and understanding this concept is crucial for advancing research
ArXiv cs.AI
Up next
Microsoft Research Forum | Season 2, Episode 4
Microsoft Research
Watch →