A certain type of brain training appears to prevent or delay dementia by some 25% in people older than age 65, according to new research.
Aging doesn’t have to mean losing your past. Scientists have found a way to "reprogram" specific memory-holding neurons, restoring youthful learning and recall in mice.
Morning Overview on MSN
How your brain locks in memories and pulls them back on demand?
The hippocampus, a small seahorse-shaped structure buried deep in the temporal lobe, acts as the brain’s primary gateway for converting fleeting experiences into stable, retrievable memories. What ...
Psychedelics can quiet the brain’s visual input system, pushing it to replace missing details with vivid fragments from ...
Background Motor and cognitive dysfunctions are common and disabling features in multiple sclerosis (MS) that remain challenging to treat. Here, we aimed to explore the effect of exergames as a ...
Researchers led by Min Zhang and Dabao Zhang of the University of California, Irvine's Joe C. Wen School of Population & ...
A newly identified protein may hold the key to rejuvenating aging brain cells. Researchers found that boosting DMTF1 can ...
AI-powered gene maps reveal the hidden control centers driving Alzheimer’s disease — and point to new hope for treatment.
Researchers engineered CD4+ chimeric antigen receptor T cells targeting fibrillar amyloid beta and tested them in a mouse ...
Scientists uncover a new “recipe” that shows how exhausted T cells can be reprogrammed to regain their ability to attack tumors.
Age-related memory decline and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's are often thought of as irreversible. But the ...
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