11 July 2013 ~ 0 Comments

The Best Way To Boost Your Memory

There’s a new reason to pick up the latest issue of Women’s Health each month: Regular reading, writing, and other brain-stimulating activities could keep your mind sharp as you age, according to new research published in Neurology, the American Academy of Neurology’s medical journal. Researchers conducted annual evaluations for 294 older adults. For each one, […]

Continue Reading

Tags: , ,

06 June 2013 ~ 0 Comments

Get This: Healthy Habits Can Boost Memory

Check out the list of links that should be on your radar today: Eating right, exercising, and staying smoke-free can help improve your memory. [Medical Daily] During the course of a recent six-year study, vegetarians were 12 percent less likely to die than meat eaters. Find delicious veggie recipes here. [WSJ] Taking fish oil regularly may […]

Continue Reading

08 May 2013 ~ 0 Comments

Get This: Meditation’s Good For Your Memory

Check out the list of links that should be on your radar today: Meditation can help boost memory and focus, according to a new study. [The Atlantic] If your most-wanted superpower is underwater breathing, you’re in luck: Researchers have created injectable oxygen that could help people do just that. [Medical Daily] This GIF of Jennifer Lawrence […]

Continue Reading

02 May 2013 ~ 0 Comments

Get This: Mediterranean Diet Boosts Memory

Check out the list of links that should be on your radar today: First researchers confirmed that loading up on produce and healthy fats promotes heart health. Now, they’re saying it could also help improve your memory. Is there anything the Mediterranean diet can’t do? [ScienceDaily] Warren Buffet wrote an amazingly pro-woman editorial for Fortune magazine: “For […]

Continue Reading

19 April 2013 ~ 0 Comments

The Scent That Improves Your Memory

Get a whiff of this: The smell of rosemary may help boost your memory, according to a new study presented at the Annual Conference of the British Psychological Society in Harrogate last week. Researchers from the University of Northumbria at Newcastle in the UK recruited 66 people and randomly placed each of them in either […]

Continue Reading