Turns out the old adage, monkey see, monkey do, does ring true even when it comes to cannabis use. However, when cannabis use involves youth it s see, think, then do, says a team of UBC Okanagan researchers.
The team found that kids who grow up in homes where parents consume cannabis will more than likely use it themselves.
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COLUMBUS, Ohio - Though obesity in midlife is linked to an increased risk for Alzheimer s disease, new research suggests that a high body mass index later in life doesn t necessarily translate to greater chances of developing the brain disease.
In the study, researchers compared data from two groups of people who had been diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment - half whose disease progressed to Alzheimer s in 24 months and half whose condition did not worsen.
The researchers zeroed in on two risk factors: body mass index (BMI) and a cluster of genetic variants associated with higher risk for Alzheimer s disease.
Despite lower exercise volume, HIIT was as effective as endurance running for improving exercise capacity and spatial memory. Researchers at the University of Tsukuba found that activity-specific physiological adaptations in the muscles and increased signaling and neurogenesis in the hippocampus underlie these improvements. Findings also suggested that benefits can potentially be optimized by tailoring exercise time and intensity.
Two components of imagination constructing and evaluating imagined scenarios rely on separate subnetworks in the default mode network, according to research recently published in JNeurosci.
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Credit: UrFU / Karina Golovanova.
Yoga and breathing exercises have a positive effect on children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). After special classes, children improve their attention, decrease hyperactivity, they do not get tired longer, they can engage in complex activities longer. This is the conclusion reached by psychologists at Ural Federal University who studied the effect of exercise on functions associated with voluntary regulation and control in 16 children with ADHD aged six to seven years. The results of the study are published in the journal
Biological Psychiatry. For children with ADHD, as a rule, the part of the brain that is responsible for the regulation of brain activity - the reticular formation - is deficient, said Sergey Kiselev, head of the Laboratory of Brain and Neurocognitive Development at UrFU, head of the study. This leads to the fact that they often experience states of inadequate hyperactivity, increased distract