Neuroscientist Wendy Suzuki explains how exercise, meditation, and sleep grow a 'big, fat, fluffy hippocampus' and sharpen memory and attention.

Dr. Wendy Suzuki — Professor of neural science and psychology at NYU, certified exercise instructor, and bestselling author known for pioneering research on how aerobic exercise improves memory, mood, and prefrontal attention function.
Andrew Huberman and Dr. Wendy Suzuki revisit her research on memory and how movement reshapes the brain. She lays out the four drivers of memorability (novelty, repetition, association, emotional resonance) and the central role of the hippocampus, illustrated by the famous patient H.M. Suzuki recounts how her own transformation from workaholic to gym-goer revealed exercise's cognitive benefits, then walks through the biology (BDNF released via myokine and liver-ketone pathways) and her lab studies on low-fit and mid-fit adults. The episode closes on practical minimums: 10 minutes of walking for mood, two-to-three cardio sessions a week for hippocampal gains, brief daily body-scan meditation, and prioritizing sleep.