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ScienceDaily: Living Well News |
Relationships are best between people of similar desirability, study finds Posted: 21 Jun 2022 12:51 PM PDT New research found that not only are people who are similarly desirable more likely to enter into a relationship, but they are also more likely to experience success within that relationship. |
75% of teens aren't getting recommended daily exercise Posted: 21 Jun 2022 11:18 AM PDT Three out of every four teens aren't getting enough exercise, and this lack is even more pronounced among female students. But new research suggests improving a school's climate can increase physical activity among adolescents. |
New safe-sleep guidelines aim to reduce infant deaths Posted: 21 Jun 2022 11:18 AM PDT There are 3,500 sleep-related infant deaths in the United States each year. Many of those deaths are preventable, and the authors of the new guidelines are urging parents to take simple steps to help keep their children safe. |
Walking gives the brain a 'step-up' in function for some Posted: 21 Jun 2022 11:17 AM PDT It has long been thought that when walking is combined with a task -- both suffer. Researchers have now found that this is not always the case. Some young and healthy people improve performance on cognitive tasks while walking by changing the use of neural resources. |
Vitamins, supplements are a 'waste of money' for most Americans Posted: 21 Jun 2022 08:47 AM PDT Scientists say for non-pregnant, otherwise healthy Americans, vitamins are a waste of money because there isn't enough evidence they help prevent cardiovascular disease or cancer. They've written an editorial in support of new recommendations that state there was 'insufficient evidence' that taking multivitamins, paired supplements or single supplements can help prevent cardiovascular disease and cancer in otherwise healthy, non-pregnant adults. |
Who benefits from brain training and why? Posted: 20 Jun 2022 09:23 AM PDT If you are skilled at playing puzzles on your smartphone or tablet, what does it say about how fast you learn new puzzles, or, more broadly, how well you can focus, say, in school or at work? Or, in the language of psychologists, does 'near transfer' predict 'far transfer'? A team of psychologists has found that people who show near transfer are more likely to show far transfer. |
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