A new meta-analysis by researchers in Finland finds that athletes tend to have better working memory than others.
There are many changes in our body as we age, and one such change is decreasing cognitive abilities. As we grow older, our ...
Elizabeth Kensinger discusses her research on the role of emotion in memory and changes in the field in an interview with APS ...
Time catches all of us eventually. But what if I were to tell you that a new study suggests there’s a simple thing you can do ...
A species of wood-eating fungus didn’t need a brain to pass a cognitive test with flying colors, and researchers say this ...
Concussions affect aperiodic brain activity, a key signal often dismissed as "background noise," which plays a role in brain ...
A recent placebo-controlled study on middle-aged adults found that taking a single capsule containing 200 mg of decaffeinated ...
A meta-analysis comparing athletes to non-athletes found that athletes consistently outperformed in working memory tasks, ...
Self-rated memory issues are more linked to dementia risk factors than standardized tests, according to Trinity College ...
Prenatal exposure to maternal pro-inflammatory cytokines shapes memory and immune function in offspring, with sex-specific ...
Higher levels of cholesterol in people with multiple sclerosis (MS) are associated with cognitive impairment, a study found.
A recently published meta-analysis reveals an advantage in sports-related information processing compared to non-athletes. The data consisted of 21 studies involving a total of 1455 participants.