A 20-year study reveals that "speed of processing" brain training can reduce the risk of dementia by 25% in older adults.
A new study suggests that cognitive training may reduce dementia risk. This is the first study to examine long-term links between brain training and dementia risk. Cognitive training and healthy ...
Speed-of-processing training with booster sessions was tied to a lower dementia risk over a 20-year period. Memory and ...
New ASD data reveals uneven cyber maturity across federal entities, rising incident activity, and escalating loss trends ...
A simple brain-training program that sharpens how quickly older adults process visual information may have a surprisingly powerful long-term payoff. In a major 20-year study of adults 65 and older, ...
Researchers tracked more than 2,800 older adults for 20 years to assess whether brain-training exercises could lower the risk of dementia.
Computer-based cognitive training that mimics quickly completing tasks with divided attention tied to a reduced likelihood of ...
A 20-year study found brain games that boost speed and split attention helped prevent Alzheimer’s and other dementias.
New research outlines how attackers bypass safeguards and why AI security must be treated as a system-wide problem.
Adults who played a specific type of cognitive speed training were found to have a dramatically lower risk of developing ...
Older adults who received cognitive speed training, plus booster sessions one and three years later, were 25% less likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) in the ...