A new study suggests that older adults who participate in computer-based "cognitive speed training" may reduce their dementia risk for up to 20 years.
Brain training reduces dementia risk by 25% over 20 years, long-term study finds. Cognitive speed training shows lasting protection against Alzheimer's disease.
Lindsey Vonn, the American skiing superstar, has always been known for her fierce determination on the slopes. At 41, she ...
Chicago Cubs and White Sox players echoed the sentiment that the union’s strength doesn’t come from one person but rather the ...
Umbrella or sun cap? Buy or sell stocks? When it comes to questions like these, many people today rely on AI-supported recommendations. Chatbots such as ChatGPT, AI-driven weather forecasts, and ...
A certain type of brain training appears to prevent or delay dementia by some 25% in people older than age 65, according to ...
Scientists report that they have developed a new machine-learning system designed to overcome challenges encountered in ...
Last night I was supposed to meet friends for dinner at 6:30, but one had to push it to 7 because of a brain-training conflict (it was pickleball, which has rebranded to emphasize its cognition ...
Wellington residents can dispose of their green waste at the Southern Landfill for free for the next seven days following the destructive storm that hit the region earlier this week.
If Nvidia integrates Groq’s technology, they solve the "waiting for the robot to think" problem. They preserve the magic of AI. Just as they moved from rendering pixels (gaming) to rendering ...
Particularly deafening is the silence of Rep. Rob Wittman. As our representative and vice chairman of the House Committee on ...
In front of an audience at Chapman University, the co-writer/performer of the first K-pop song to ever win a Grammy reflects on how it emerged after she was told she would never become a K-pop idol: ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results