We mark age by birthdays, but inside our bodies, every organ is on its own clock. And according to new research out of Stanford University, your brain’s biological age might be the best single ...
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 ...
Daily routines change, and many older adults find that learning new processes becomes more difficult over time. Slower ...
More than five years after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, we are still discovering the after-effects of not only the virus but also the prolonged period of stress, isolation, loss, and ...
Your birth certificate might say you're 65 years old but your brain can still remain far younger or older, maybe of 55 or 70s. Maybe it's how you treat yourself determind age of your brain. Recently ...
A year of consistent exercise appears to rejuvenate the brain – but don’t ask scientists how yet In A Nutshell Adults who ...
The brains of healthy people aged faster during the COVID-19 pandemic than did the brains of people analysed before the pandemic began, a study of almost 1,000 people suggests. The accelerated ageing ...
Stanford scientists found that aging disrupts the brain’s internal navigation system in mice, mirroring spatial memory decline in humans. Older mice struggled to recall familiar locations, while a few ...