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Mental and Emotional Abilities That Actually Improve With Age
That study published in Nature and Human Behaviour added another critical brain function that seemingly improved with age: executive inhibition. Your executive inhibition relates to your ability to control your attention, thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. Among other things, It allows you to effectively block out unnecessary distractions and instead better focus on the task at hand. The study goes on to suggest that, in spite of the documented decrease in the brain’s alerting faculties, the combined increases in both its orienting and executive abilities add up to a net positive. Physical...…That study published in Nature and Human Behaviour added another critical brain function that seemingly improved with age: executive inhibition. Your executive inhibition relates to your ability to control your attention, thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. Among other things, It allows you to effectively block out unnecessary distractions and instead better focus on the task at hand. The study goes on to suggest that, in spite of the documented decrease in the brain’s alerting faculties, the combined increases in both its orienting and executive abilities add up to a net positive. Physical...WW…
New Zealand's COVID-19 'eradication' strategy looks to be paying off
Chris Brown - CBC NewsAfter more than a month confined to dry land without being immersed in the salt and sea, New Zealander Zen Wallis says it feels like he's living in someone else's body. "It's really strange to not go into the water," the professional surfer told CBC News in an interview by Skype. "My skin feels different; my hair feels different." Surfing has been one of the casualties of New Zealand's extreme COVID-19 lockdown introduced in mid-March, one of the most stringent virus-fighting regimes anywhere in the world.ADVERTISEMENTWallis, 28, runs a surfing school in Piha on New...…Chris Brown - CBC NewsAfter more than a month confined to dry land without being immersed in the salt and sea, New Zealander Zen Wallis says it feels like he's living in someone else's body. "It's really strange to not go into the water," the professional surfer told CBC News in an interview by Skype. "My skin feels different; my hair feels different." Surfing has been one of the casualties of New Zealand's extreme COVID-19 lockdown introduced in mid-March, one of the most stringent virus-fighting regimes anywhere in the world.ADVERTISEMENTWallis, 28, runs a surfing school in Piha on New...WW…
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