A 20-year follow-up of older adults in the ACTIVE randomized trial linked to Medicare claims found that speed of processing cognitive training with booster sessions was associated with a significantly ...
Here's what you can do now to protect your brain in your 40s, 50s, and beyond.
Certain types of brain-training exercises could lower the risk of dementia by about 25%, according to new research connected to a long-running study supported by the National Institutes of Health.
A study finds that people who did one specific form of brain training in the 1990s were less likely to be diagnosed with dementia over the next 20 years.
A UCSF team finds a liver protein, released with exercise, that improves memory in aging and Alzheimer’s disease by repairing the brain’s blood vessels. It's the missing link between exercise and ...
The good news? You don’t need to run a marathon or learn rocket science. From puzzles to knitting and music, there are plenty of sofa-friendly hobbies that could give your brain a meaningful workout.
The results of this decades-long study offer a powerful message of hope: we are not helpless against the passage of time. By ...
A long-running study following thousands of older adults suggests that a relatively brief period of targeted brain training may have effects that last decades.
Data are limited, however. In mice, ingesting exercise mimetics appeared to improve depressive-like behaviors, and the ...