The simple act of crossing a road could help shield the brain from dementia and other cognitive conditions, according to new research from the Australian Catholic University and UNSW Sydney's Center ...
Researchers used AI and deep learning to find a link between brain structure and navigation skills but found no measurable ...
The stress hormone cortisol disrupts the brain's grid cells, blurring the internal GPS system and impairing navigation.
The Chosun Ilbo on MSN
Walkable cities linked to lower dementia risk in elderly
A study has found that people living in walkable cities have a lower probability of developing dementia. On the 12th, the British Daily Mail cited a joint study by the Australian Catholic University ...
A new study published in Nature suggests that the neural foundations of spatial navigation—the brain's internal "GPS"—may have emerged far earlier in evolution than previously believed. The research, ...
The stress hormone cortisol can impair a person's ability to navigate in space, disrupting the work of special neural ...
Living in cities designed to encourage walking may help protect older adults from dementia, according to a new study that ...
The brain may organize emotions like locations on a map, revealing a hidden system that helps people interpret changing feelings.
A new spatial transcriptomic approach captures the regulation of splicing and polyadenylation sites during pubescent brain development at near-single-cell resolution. An international collaboration, ...
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