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brain learning power peaks at specific times of day

Brain Learning Power Peaks at Specific Times of Day​

A new study reveals that the brain’s responsiveness and capacity for learning shift with the time of day, governed by molecules like adenosine that link metabolism, sleep, and neural signaling. Using optogenetics, researchers found that identical stimuli activated brain cells differently at sunrise versus sunset, suggesting that neuronal excitability and plasticity follow daily rhythms.​ 

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low income, vision loss, and isolation drive dementia risk

Low Income, Vision Loss, and Isolation Drive Dementia Risk​

A new study reveals that people with lower incomes and those from historically underrepresented racial and ethnic groups carry a higher burden of modifiable dementia risk factors. Vision loss and social isolation were among the most significant contributors for those living below the poverty line, suggesting that better access to healthcare and community support could

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alzheimer’s drug reduces amyloid but fails to restore brain waste flow

Alzheimer’s Drug Reduces Amyloid but Fails to Restore Brain Waste Flow​

Researchers found that lecanemab, the Alzheimer’s drug designed to clear amyloid-β plaques, does not improve the brain’s waste clearance system in the short term. In a three-month study using MRI-based DTI-ALPS imaging, scientists observed no measurable recovery in glymphatic function after treatment.​ 

Alzheimer’s Drug Reduces Amyloid but Fails to Restore Brain Waste Flow​ Read More »

speaking multiple languages may slow down biological aging

Speaking Multiple Languages May Slow Down Biological Aging​

A large-scale study of more than 86,000 Europeans found that speaking multiple languages may help slow biological and cognitive aging. Using artificial intelligence to assess “biobehavioral age gaps,” researchers discovered that multilingual individuals were over twice as likely to show signs of healthy aging compared to monolinguals.​ 

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genome study reveals true genetic influence on traits

Genome Study Reveals True Genetic Influence on Traits​

Using full genome sequencing data from more than 347,000 individuals, researchers quantified how much genetic differences explain human traits such as height, body mass index, fertility, and disease risk. The results show that genes account for roughly 30% of the variation between individuals, with higher estimates for traits like height and lower for fertility.​ 

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everyday speech may reveal early cognitive decline

Everyday Speech May Reveal Early Cognitive Decline​

Researchers found that everyday speech timing — including pauses, fillers, and subtle patterns — strongly reflects executive function, a key cognitive system that supports memory and flexible thinking. Using AI to analyze natural speech, the study showed that these linguistic features can predict cognitive-test performance independent of age, sex, or education.​ 

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ai models form theory of mind beliefs

AI Models Form Theory-of-Mind Beliefs​

Researchers showed that large language models use a small, specialized subset of parameters to perform Theory-of-Mind reasoning, despite activating their full network for every task. This sparse internal circuitry depends heavily on positional encoding, especially rotary positional encoding, which shapes how the model tracks beliefs and perspectives.​ 

AI Models Form Theory-of-Mind Beliefs​ Read More »

stress undermines brain circulation, increases dementia risk

Stress Undermines Brain Circulation, Increases Dementia Risk​

Researchers found that a rare class of neurons—type-one nNOS neurons—plays a central role in regulating brain blood flow and coordinating neural activity in mice. Removing these stress-vulnerable cells caused major drops in vessel oscillations and widespread reductions in electrical signaling, suggesting a crucial link between neuron loss, blood-flow decline, and brain-function impairment.​ 

Stress Undermines Brain Circulation, Increases Dementia Risk​ Read More »

autism and adhd brain patterns reveal shared biological roots

Autism and ADHD Brain Patterns Reveal Shared Biological Roots​

A new study shows that autism symptom severity, rather than a formal diagnosis, aligns with shared brain-connectivity patterns across children diagnosed with autism or ADHD. Stronger autistic traits were linked to heightened connectivity between frontoparietal and default-mode networks, regions central to social cognition and executive functions.​ 

Autism and ADHD Brain Patterns Reveal Shared Biological Roots​ Read More »

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