I read this when PJ Eby sent it round. Acecdatum: I have absolutely no idea what the author was talking about. I definitely wasn't holding my breath when he claimed that I would be, and have since noticed that my breathing patterns definitely don't follow those mentioned in the article.
I do quite a lot of underwater swimming, so have pretty good lung capacity (can comfortably(ish) hold my breath for approximately two minutes) no idea if this is relevant.
On January 4, PJ Eby sent around an email linking an... interesting... website. The claim on the particular webpage he linked was as follows:
This site is part of a sales pitch, so many of the claims are stated in hyperbolic language. I've already noted one factual error: the webpage claims that being underwater triggers the diving reflex, while in fact (or at least, according to Wikipedia) the diving reflex is triggered when one's face is immersed in water colder that 21 °C.
But there is a testable claim here: learn to hold your breath for longer periods of time -- particularly in conditions that elicit the diving reflex -- and you will see increased intelligence. I know that some readers of LW regularly train and test their intelligence, so I offer this as an easily implemented potential method. The possible gains seem to me to outweigh the costs of the training and the low prior probability of the claim.