Memory Test

Memory Test - most related articles:

- Test your memory test for Alzheimer's disease - 6.9
- Memory performance worsens with age - 4.6
- Stopping smoking boosts everyday memory - 4.5
- Blueberry juice improves memory in older adults - 4.1
- Menopause transition may cause trouble learning - 4
- Depression may increase Alzheimer's disease risk - 3.9
- Intellectual ability test in early 20s may predict dementia risk - 3.6
- Poor money management indicates Alzheimer's disease - 3.6
- A mind at rest strengthens memories - 3.5
- Cluttered brain doesn't remember - 3.5

Memory Test articles

Cell phone may boost memory in Alzheimer's disease patients
The millions of people who spend hours every day on a cell phone may have a new excuse for yakking. A surprising new study in mice provides the first evidence that long-term exposure to electromagnetic waves associated with cell phone use may actually protect against, and even reverse, Alzheimer's disease.

White matter changes may predict dementia risk
Elderly people with no memory or thinking problems are more likely to later develop thinking problems if they have a growing amount of "brain rust," or small areas of brain damage, revealed by researchers.

Parkinson's disease alters ability to learn from rewards
Parkinson's disease alters patient's ability to learn from rewards while treatment affects ability to learn from negative outcome -- research reveals possible link to depression, impulse control disorders.

US seniors smarter than English seniors
US seniors performed significantly better that their English counterparts, revealed by researchers. The finding is surprising because older people in the US are known to suffer more from cardiovascular risk factors and diseases generally associated with more cognitive decline and poorer mental function.

Test your memory test for Alzheimer's disease
UK researchers at Addenbrooke's Hospital have created a new cognitive test (TYM) that detects Alzheimer's disease quickly and accurately. The study published online on BMJ.com.

Memory performance worsens with age
Thinking your memory will get worse as you get older may actually be a self-fulfilling prophecy. Researchers at North Carolina State University have found that senior citizens who think older people should perform poorly on tests of memory actually score much worse than seniors who do not buy in to negative stereotypes about aging and memory loss.

6 Memory Test articles listed above.


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