Regularly helping others, whether through volunteering or simple acts of kindness, can slow cognitive decline and boost brain health in older adults, new research finds.
The field of cognitive science has been dramatically reshaped by the emergence of large-scale neural architectures, most notably Transformer-based Large ...
New research reveals that intelligence plays a key role in how well people process speech in noisy environments. The study ...
In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look Nvidia’s collaborations in life sciences and drug development, Cobot’s ...
The scientists found that cognitive ability strongly influenced how well participants understood speech in noisy conditions.
ScienceAlert on MSN
The Junk Foods That Harm Your Brain Most, Ranked by New Research
Homing in on the junk-food pyramid to rank its most harmful members, researchers from Virginia Tech have discovered that ...
In this special edition of the Student Notebook, early-career scholars from across the APSSC community share their ...
September Faculty and Staff GrantsThreat Interpretation Bias as Cognitive Marker and Treatment Target in Pediatric ...
Separate brain processes cope with moment-to-moment versus big-picture experiences, which helps explain how parenting both ...
A new McGill-led study reveals that digital brain exercises can rejuvenate aging brain systems responsible for learning and ...
Live Science on MSN
'Chemo brain' may stem from damage to the brain's drainage system
An early-stage study has found that a common chemotherapy drug disrupts lymphatic cells in the tissue surrounding the brain.
Chimpanzees use a variation of the "scientific method" — discarding prior beliefs if convincing new evidence comes along to ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results