The number of candles on a birthday cake marks time, but it does not tell the full story of aging. Two people born in the ...
Using polysomnography, researchers found that the difference between a person's brain age and their chronological age may influence their dementia risk. Image credit: A.J. Schokora/Stocksy A recent ...
Your brain doesn’t lose nerve cells as it ages nearly as much as we used to think. According to research by Dr. Morrison and colleagues at Mt. Sinai Medical School, earlier estimates that up to1% of ...
The difference between the brain's predicted age and actual chronological age, called a brain age gap, may influence the relationship between cognitive impairment risk factors, like high blood ...
That viral claim that your frontal lobe “isn’t fully developed until 25” turns out to be more myth than milestone. Early brain scans showed that gray matter changes dramatically through the teen years ...
A new study uses AI and MEG scans to prove speaking multiple languages makes the brain look up to 13 years younger.