This past weekend the New York Times continued its coverage of the Boomers reaching retirement age. Interestingly, they tracked down and profiled the first boomer (at least one of the early ones) to reach retirement age; click the link to read more about this generation and one of its first born, Aloysius Nachreiner. Oliver Sacks [...]
Tags: aging, baby boomers, brain fitness, Brain plasticity, lifestyle
Posted January 5, 2011 by Sharon Delman under Benefits of Brain Fitness, Brain plasticity, Neuroscience
Time Magazine got it wrong. Naming Mark Zuckerberg “Person of the Year” is okay but a better choice would have been the first Boomer to turn 65 in 2011. That person, whomever he or she may be, is literally at the forefront of a tsunami that will change our world. NPR reported this morning that [...]
Tags: aging, baby boomers, brain fitness, brain health, lifestyle
Posted December 29, 2010 by Sharon Delman under Benefits of Brain Fitness, Brain exercise, Exercise, Physical exercise
A long-term research study followed over 900 older adults for five years and saw those who trained with Posit Science’s speed-of-processing technology reduced at-fault crash by 50%.
Tags: ACTIVE study, brain training, crash risk, DriveSharp, elderly drivers, motor vehicle collision, MVC, speed of processing, UFOV, useful field of view
Posted November 5, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under DriveSharp, Driving, Driving safety, Neuroscience, Processing speed
We’re learning more about the long-term impact of brain injury and the importance of reducing the potential for repeated head injuries within a short time frame. Here are some concrete steps to take.
Tags: brain injury, sports, traumatic brain injury
Posted November 2, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under Benefits of Brain Fitness, Neuroscience, Research studies
Last week I wrote about some very healthy, happy centenarians and talked about a recent study on people aged 100+ that found some commonalities across those living long and well. Today I saw that Dr. Mark Lachs has just come out with a new book called Treat Me, Not My Age which purports to give [...]
Tags: centenarian, depression, driving safety, improve memory, medical expenditures, memory loss, quality of life, safer driving
Posted October 27, 2010 by Karen Merzenich under Benefits of Brain Fitness, Brain exercise, Brain Fitness Program, DriveSharp, InSight, Memory, Neuroscience, Physical exercise, Processing speed, Research studies
Last week, yet nother study showing the beneficial impact of playing video games appeared in the news. Traci Sitzmann, as assistant professor of management at the University of Colorado, Denver, did a meta-analysis of a number of different studies to find out if training workers would improve performance on the job. Her conclusion: … [she [...]
Tags: brain exercise, brain training, employee training, scientific evidence
Posted October 25, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under Benefits of Brain Fitness, Posit Science software, Research studies
Over the last 20 years, the number of people in the U.S. who are 100 years old or older has tripled–meaning that now, nearly 100,000 Americans have been alive for a century or more. I have really been enjoying an interactive feature from the New York Times called “Secrets of the Centenarians – Life Before, [...]
Tags: aging, blue zones, brain healthy eating, centenarians, Dan Buettner, healthy aging, healthy lifestyle, improve memory
Posted October 20, 2010 by Karen Merzenich under Alzheimer's disease, Benefits of Brain Fitness, Memory, Research studies
A study showing that people who retire earlier have lower performance on cognitive tests. This is another piece of evidence that leading a brain-healthy lifestyle improves cognitive abilities later in life.
Tags: ACTIVE study, cognitive decline, cognitive performance, david snowdon, IMPACT study, improve brain, improve memory loss, memory loss, nun study, Retirement
Posted October 14, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under Alzheimer's disease, Benefits of Brain Fitness, Brain Fitness Program, DriveSharp, InSight, Neuroscience, Physical exercise
I ran across a very clear explanation from Harvard Health about how to protect the brain’s abilities. (Note: that link is a summary press release; to get the full report, you can purchase it here.) They talk about building your “brain bank” by challenging your mind and staying physically active. It’s great to see a simple [...]
Tags: brain bank, brain injury, Brain plasticity, brain stiumlation, brain training, harvard health, neuroplasticity, neuroprotection, protect memory
Posted October 11, 2010 by Steven Aldrich under Benefits of Brain Fitness, Brain plasticity
Barbara Strauch, author of The Secret Life of the Grown Up Brain, spoke this week at Stanford. Strauch is the health/medical science editor for The New York Times and when she writes on brain topics, the articles consistently skyrocket to the top of the “Most E-mailed List.” I attended her lecture at the Center for [...]
Tags: barbara strauch, cognitive performance, diabetes, diet, grown up brain, improve memory, middle age, nutrition, obesity, old age
Posted October 1, 2010 by Sharon Delman under Benefits of Brain Fitness, Brain exercise, Brain plasticity, Exercise, Neuroscience, Physical exercise