New York Post may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you click or buy through our links. Featured pricing is subject to change. Is Gen Z finally logging off? Over the past few ...
Fish oil has long been praised as brain-boosting, but new research suggests the story may be more complicated. Scientists found that in people with repeated mild head injuries, a key omega-3 fatty ...
It’s a slogan that Generation Z loves in meme form, but in practice, they’d rather play it safe. Gen Z − the cohort born in the years 1997 to 2012 − is obsessed with cringe, or more aptly, with ...
Researchers created a "Brainrot Index" to rank U.S. states by levels of digital overstimulation. "Brainrot," the 2024 Oxford Word of the Year, describes diminished cognitive function from excessive ...
UCSB scientists discovered that watching just seven minutes can open your mind and enhance creativity. By Steven Zeitchik Senior Editor, Technology and Politics When Jonathan Schooler and Madeleine ...
But a new neuroscience study suggests maybe you should. The new brain imaging study published in the Journal of Neuroscience found that experienced birders had hallmarks of brains younger than their ...
We tend to reach for simple answers when it comes to protecting our brains: Eat this, avoid that, follow a single “best” diet. But a new large study published in Neurology reminds us that when it ...
Here’s a nonexhaustive list of things Gen Z finds cringe: drinking, getting a driver’s license, having a boyfriend, going out, not going out, using the wrong emojis, using the wrong slang, parting ...
From our jokes and slang to the White House’s policy messaging, internet “brain rot” has escaped our phones to take over … well, everything. Credit...Illustration by Erik Carter Supported by By Willy ...
If you’ve spent much time on TikTok recently, you may have noticed a strange new type of AI brain rot taking over: fruit dramas. These AI-generated short dramas feature odd-looking anthropomorphic ...
A recent study published in Physical Review Letters reveals that many widely used signatures of criticality in brain data may be statistical artifacts. They propose a more robust framework that, when ...
There is a particular kind of shame that comes with forgetting something you knew. You studied it, you understood it, and then—nothing. A name, a fact, a face. Gone. I’ve spent two decades training to ...