A McGill University clinical trial found that digital brain training can restore key brain functions that fade with age.
Online brain-training games can improve memory in older people, a new study has revealed. Researchers at McGill University led a clinical trial of 92 healthy adults aged 65 and older. Participants ...
A new McGill-led study reveals that digital brain exercises can rejuvenate aging brain systems responsible for learning and memory. Older adults using BrainHQ for 10 weeks showed restored cholinergic ...
PsyPost on MSN
From tango to StarCraft: Creative activities linked to slower brain aging, according to new neuroscience research
Engaging in creative activities such as music, dance, drawing, and even certain types of video games may support healthier ...
The Print on MSN
Dementia wave is hitting Indian homes. Families are exhausted, healthcare unprepared
Fewer than 50 specialised dementia care centres exist nationwide, most in big cities and run by private hospitals or ...
Indiana's rapid rise shows what's possible for a 'basketball school.' Maryland's challenge is closing the gap in spending, ...
The October 30 edition of the SBJ Football newsletter features coverage of the reasons behind the steady departures of vice presidents from the NFL, why more Sunday windows are becoming national games ...
According to Letterboxd users, Die My Love, The Hunger Games, and Mother! are among the best movies starring Oscar-winning ...
The November 6 edition of the SBJ Football newsletter reports on the goals behind the Houston Texans' owners purchase of a ...
The 5-foot-8 Heitmeyer’s ability on the soccer field — particularly his leg strength — probably leaves many of his peers a ...
Meet Up’s owner Yong Wang saw Shadow as a remedy to the challenges of COVID — her Mandarin name, “Shadu,” translates roughly ...
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