A 20-year follow-up of the NIH-funded ACTIVE trial found that older adults who completed adaptive visual speed-of-processing training with booster sessions had a 25% lower dementia risk than controls.
Medical students often default to passive study habits like rereading notes, but research shows active recall and retrieval practice dramatically improve retention and understanding. By actively ...
AI in China is not simply a high-growth technology theme, but a strategic capability tied to national competitiveness, ...
Emerging-market equities have delivered a sharp move higher over the past year, and the three largest vehicles investors use ...
Social media is saturated with menopause solutions: powders for brain fog, gummies for sleep or capsules promising hormonal ...
Collaboration will support Memorial Minutes campaign and strengthen programs serving more than 320,000 veterans and ...
Human resource professionals and academics also report an unexpected side effect among workers due to overuse of technology ...
Apple TV has unveiled a teaser and first-look images for Silo Season 3, the upcoming chapter of its Graham Yost-created ...
A rare group of adults over 80, known as SuperAgers, are rewriting what we thought was possible for the aging brain. With memory abilities comparable to people decades younger, their brains either ...
Why does a comforting touch stay with us for years, while other sensations quickly fade from our minds? A new paper offers a ...
With two models to choose from at launch – Lito 1 and Lito X1 – I wondered what the key differences between the two new ...