Listing 1 - 5 of 5 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
The authors show that scientific research does not support the notion of the inexorable and progressive effects of cognitive aging in all older adults. They report that many adults maintain a high level of cognitive function into old age and that certain lifestyle factors contribute to the preservation of cognitive abilities.
Brain -- Aging. --- Brain -- Diseases -- Age factors. --- Brain -- Physiology. --- Nervous System Physiological Processes --- Growth and Development --- Central Nervous System --- Biological Science Disciplines --- Adult --- Mental Processes --- Physiological Processes --- Age Groups --- Psychological Phenomena and Processes --- Natural Science Disciplines --- Nervous System --- Nervous System Physiological Phenomena --- Anatomy --- Psychiatry and Psychology --- Physiological Phenomena --- Musculoskeletal and Neural Physiological Phenomena --- Persons --- Disciplines and Occupations --- Named Groups --- Phenomena and Processes --- Cognition --- Brain --- Aging --- Neuronal Plasticity --- Aged --- Physiology --- Human Anatomy & Physiology --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Neuroscience --- Physiology. --- Diseases --- Age factors. --- Aging. --- Cerebrum --- Mind --- Central nervous system --- Head --- Neuroplasticity. --- Physiological aspects. --- COGNITIVE SCIENCES/Psychology/Cognitive Psychology --- COGNITIVE SCIENCES/General --- NEUROSCIENCE/General --- Nervous system plasticity --- Neural adaptation --- Neural plasticity --- Neuronal adaptation --- Neuronal plasticity --- Plasticity, Nervous system --- Soft-wired nervous system --- Synaptic plasticity --- Adaptation (Physiology) --- Neurophysiology --- Developmental neurobiology --- Psychology --- Aged. --- Neuronal Plasticity. --- physiology. --- physiology --- Cerveau --- Physiologie.
Choose an application
The field of cognitive aging has evolved from a focus on cataloging age-related declines of brain and mind in healthy older people to a focus on interventions aimed at limiting those declines. Intervention research has obtained convincing evidence of the cognitive benefits of aerobic exercise and working memory training. Recently interest has broadened to include interventions that consider the social and physical environment of the aged individual. Examples of this are investigations of training cognitive-motor integration, interventions to reduce loneliness, mindfulness training, and human factors-based approaches to cognitive deficits. Such approaches move beyond targeting specific abilities in isolation to consider more broadly the overall well-being of the healthy older person. In this Research Topic we call for both empirical and review papers that consider interventions aimed at reducing cognitive and brain aging but also approaches that consider older individuals (animal and human) in their physical and social environment.
Science: general issues --- Neurosciences --- mindfulness --- meditation --- tDCS --- neurofeedback --- smartphone apps software --- exergaming --- cognitive aging --- brain plasticity --- cognitive training --- physical exercise --- multidomain interventions
Choose an application
The field of cognitive aging has evolved from a focus on cataloging age-related declines of brain and mind in healthy older people to a focus on interventions aimed at limiting those declines. Intervention research has obtained convincing evidence of the cognitive benefits of aerobic exercise and working memory training. Recently interest has broadened to include interventions that consider the social and physical environment of the aged individual. Examples of this are investigations of training cognitive-motor integration, interventions to reduce loneliness, mindfulness training, and human factors-based approaches to cognitive deficits. Such approaches move beyond targeting specific abilities in isolation to consider more broadly the overall well-being of the healthy older person. In this Research Topic we call for both empirical and review papers that consider interventions aimed at reducing cognitive and brain aging but also approaches that consider older individuals (animal and human) in their physical and social environment.
mindfulness --- meditation --- tDCS --- neurofeedback --- smartphone apps software --- exergaming --- cognitive aging --- brain plasticity --- cognitive training --- physical exercise --- multidomain interventions
Choose an application
The field of cognitive aging has evolved from a focus on cataloging age-related declines of brain and mind in healthy older people to a focus on interventions aimed at limiting those declines. Intervention research has obtained convincing evidence of the cognitive benefits of aerobic exercise and working memory training. Recently interest has broadened to include interventions that consider the social and physical environment of the aged individual. Examples of this are investigations of training cognitive-motor integration, interventions to reduce loneliness, mindfulness training, and human factors-based approaches to cognitive deficits. Such approaches move beyond targeting specific abilities in isolation to consider more broadly the overall well-being of the healthy older person. In this Research Topic we call for both empirical and review papers that consider interventions aimed at reducing cognitive and brain aging but also approaches that consider older individuals (animal and human) in their physical and social environment.
Science: general issues --- Neurosciences --- mindfulness --- meditation --- tDCS --- neurofeedback --- smartphone apps software --- exergaming --- cognitive aging --- brain plasticity --- cognitive training --- physical exercise --- multidomain interventions --- mindfulness --- meditation --- tDCS --- neurofeedback --- smartphone apps software --- exergaming --- cognitive aging --- brain plasticity --- cognitive training --- physical exercise --- multidomain interventions
Listing 1 - 5 of 5 |
Sort by
|