Today’s Solutions: April 17, 2025

A new study out of the University of Texas at Dallas has found that demanding learning can restore even an aging brain. Researchers compared changes in brain activity in older adults randomly placed into high-challenge, low-challenge or placebo groups. The high-challenge group engaged in learning more difficult skills such as quilting and digital photography, whereas the other groups did simpler tasks with no active learning component, such as listening to music and cooking. After meeting 15 hours per week for 14 weeks, all the participants were examined. Members of the high-challenge group demonstrated better memory performance after the intervention, and an increased ability to control brain activity more efficiently as well as showing performance improvements in the medial frontal, lateral temporal, and parietal cortex regions of the brain, which are associated with attention and word processing. So keep challenging your brain, it will only help keep it younger.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Dublin expands car-free zones to improve bus travel and city life

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Dublin is taking further steps to reduce private car traffic in its city centre, with new restrictions set ...

Read More

At 100 years old, this Galapagos tortoise just became a mom—and a conservatio...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM At the Philadelphia Zoo, a century-old resident named Mommy is celebrating a remarkable milestone—and not just because she’s ...

Read More

On the road to mental health: 3 tips for men who have no idea how to start th...

When it comes to entering the world of therapy, guys are frequently lost, unsure of where to begin. They may have the desire to ...

Read More

Sewage heat: Vancouver’s steamy and sustainable energy source

Since 2010, an innovative energy program in Vancouver's False Creek has quietly transformed the city's energy landscape. This novel technology harnesses the latent heat in ...

Read More