Lifelong learning activities, including reading, writing, and learning new languages may help lower Alzheimer's risk, more ...
Cognitive health in later life is ‘strongly influenced’ by lifelong exposure to intellectually stimulating environments, say researchers ...
Everyday Health on MSN
Activities That Engage the Brain Could Lower Alzheimer’s Risk
Activities like learning a new language as a child or reading, writing, and playing board games later in life all had an impact on Alzheimer’s risk.
Engaging in a variety of intellectually stimulating activities throughout life, such as reading, writing and learning a ...
ZME Science on MSN
Reading books and writing is linked to a 40% drop in Alzheimer’s risk
We often talk about the brain as if it were a computer — a machine that processes data until the hardware eventually fails. But a computer doesn’t get faster or more resilient just because you loaded ...
MedPage Today on MSN
Alzheimer's dementia risk nearly 40% lower with lifelong learning
Intellectual enrichment throughout the lifespan tied to higher cognitive function ...
Books, writing and learning languages proven to slash Alzheimer’s risk - Experts say maintaining an active brain can stave off a decline in crucial thinking skills and memory ...
Engaging in activities such as reading, writing, or learning new languages could reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease by almost 40 per cent, according to new research. Experts suggest ...
Researchers explored how manual and keyboard practice influenced children's abilities in their reading and writing learning process. 5-year-olds were taught an artificial alphabet using different ...
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