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Breastfeeding may give babies early practice in self-control, longitudinal study suggests
A recent study published in the journal Appetite suggests that infants who are breastfed may develop better self-control skills by the time they reach preschool. The findings provide evidence that the ...
A peer‑reviewed study finds that during prolonged high‑frequency firing, parvalbumin‑expressing interneurons lose action potential strength along their axons, even when somatic firing remains stable.
Research shows that averaging brain scans hides how individuals use their brains, offering new insights into personalized ...
Toddlers engage more regions of their brains around 16-months to help them develop important cognitive skills, enabling them to follow simple instructions and control impulses. Findings from the study ...
Children who enter preschool with good vocabulary and attention skills do better in class, according to a study published in the peer-reviewed journal Early Education and Development. The findings ...
In the split second that is needed to view a stop sign and react to it, our brain navigates a complex process that transitions seamlessly from perception to action control. This ability to halt or ...
Studying cognition by averaging data from many people's brain scans hides how individuals use their brains, new Stanford Medicine research has shown. In particular, children who struggle with ...
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