Children exposed to high levels of screen time before age 2 showed changes in brain development that were linked to slower ...
New research following children for more than a decade links high screen exposure before age two to accelerated brain maturation, slower decision-making, and increased anxiety by adolescence.
For more than a century, brain imaging has been a story of trade-offs: sharp pictures but slow timing, or fast signals with ...
Recent studies show the importance of giving the brain healthy breaks — and it may look slightly different than you think. To process information effectively, the brain should function in a specific ...
Maybe people can control time — or their perception of it, anyway. A new paper written by UNLV professor of psychology James Hyman and published recently in Current Biology shows that the way people ...
What are you doing when you aren’t doing anything at all? If you said “nothing,” then you have just passed a test in logic and flunked a test in neuroscience. When people perform mental tasks–adding ...
I slumped in a wheelchair in my doctor’s office. The clock above the door ticked erratically, as if someone outside the room was winding the gears forward and then turning them back every few seconds.
Your brain doesn't have to age on autopilot. New research shows we can slow—and potentially reverse—brain aging.
Experts say that certain everyday foods — from soda to fries — may damage the blood vessels that feed the brain, raising the ...
Have you ever met someone and felt an instant connection? Research from UCLA and Dartmouth suggests that our brains recognize ...
Scientists at the Carney Institute for Brain Science have discovered specific patterns of electrical signals in the brain that may help forecast whether a person will go on to develop Alzheimer’s ...