Skip navigation

快橙vqn官网

The Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (Cam-CAN) is a large-scale collaborative research project at the University of Cambridge, launched in October 2010, with substantial initial funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), followed by support from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Cognition & Brain Sciences Unit (CBU) and the European Union Horizon 2023 LifeBrain project. The Cam-CAN project uses epidemiological, cognitive, and neuroimaging data to understand how individuals can best retain cognitive abilities into old age.

快橙vqn官网

老王永久佛系免费下载

‘Motor learning’ describes our ability to learn new skills, such as playing tennis or riding a bike. In young adults, such motor skill learning uses automatic brain systems, called implicit memory. A new Cam-CAN study shows that as we get older, motor skill learning starts to rely on a different type of memory, called explicit memory, which relies on the hippocampus. Changes in the hippocampus explain why for many people, this type of learning gets more difficult as they get older.

View Publication

Emotional positivity doesn't always increase with age.

老王永久佛系免费下载

Older people typically report higher levels of emotional well-being despite declines in other cognitive domains such as memory and executive function. We tested age-related changes in emotional reactivity and regulation using functional MRI, showing participants positive, negative and neutral videos and asking them how each one made them feel. Older people showed decreased rather than increased positivity in their reactions, which was linked to reduced brain activity in the middle frontal gyrus, an area associated with successful emotional regulation. Thus age does not always improve emotional regulation.

View Publication

Perceptual and conceptual processing of visual objects across the adult lifespan.

老王 梯子 佛系

New research from Bruffaerts and colleauges investigated differences across the adult life-span in perceptual and conceptual processing by comparing neural measures of object processing to behaviour. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), they showed better neural semantic processing is linked to both higher picture naming accuracy and higher levels of fluid intelligence. These results indicate that maintaining neural responsivity in older age confers benefits in task-related and domain-general cognitive processes.

View Publication

老王 梯子 佛系

Physical activity mediates the relationship between age and brain structural connectivity.

Juho Strömmer and colleagues at CamCAN found that Physical Activity Energy Expenditure (PAEE) declines with Age (left plot) and partially mediates the relationship between Age and Fractional Anisotropy (FA) - a measure of white matter health - in several brain tracts like corpus collosum (right).

老王永久免费佛系加速

老王佛系VP

Cardiovascular health is associated with brain health across the lifespan.

永久免费梯子佛系

Research by Dr Delia Fuhrmann and colleagues shows that lower diastolic blood pressure, higher systolic blood pressure and higher heart rate are each strongly, and independently, associated with white matter lesion burden and microstructure in the brain. These results highlight the importance of maintaining cardiovascular health for healthy cognitive and brain ageing.

View Publication

老王佛系VP

老王佛系免费

老王佛系VP

How do we sustain youth-like cognitive abilities despite brain-wide structural loss as we get older? While we know that brain function may play a role in this, it is unclear which aspect of brain function is particularly important, e.g. the extent to which brain regions are activated (functional activity) or the extent to which regions “talk” to each other (functional connectivity). Research by Dr. Tsvetanov and colleagues indicates that functional connectivity, but not functional activity, becomes increasingly important for performance in old age. These insights may facilitate the development of new strategies to support cognitive ability in old age.

View Publication

老王佛系ios

Mid-life activities protect old-age cognition against brain decline.

老王佛系免费

Denis Chan and colleagues at the University of Cambridge studied 205 retired individuals from the CamCAN cohort and found that mid-life intellectual, physical and social activities made significant positive contributions to their current cognitive abilities (IQ). The positive effects of mid-life activities also appear to have a protective effect in the face of poor structural brain health.

View Publication

CamCAN paper wins Editor's Choice Award at Human Brain Mapping conference.

CamCAN paper wins with paper titled "Challenges in measuring individual differences in functional connectivity using fMRI"

老王佛系官网下载

老王永久免费佛系加速

Reorganization of relations among brain regions after middle age.

Susanne de Mooij, prof. Rik Henson and Dr. Rogier Kievit investigated whether and when brain connections change with age, and how these changes map onto our cognitive functioning. Using Cam-CAN data, they observed that brain structures become less connected to each other after about 55 years of age. In contrast, the relations between language, memory and reasoning stayed the same across the lifespan. Finally, they found that memory performance becomes less dependent on a white matter network (connecting the hippocampus to other parts of the brain) in later life.

永久免费梯子佛系

老王佛系VP老王永久佛系免费下载

Age-related increase in frontal brain activity is not compensatory.

Dr. Alexa Morcom and Prof. Rik Henson investigate the elevated prefrontal cortex activity that is often observed in healthy older adults despite declines in their memory and other cognitive functions. They compare two leading models of brain ageing: that the frontal cortex is either compensating for impairments elsewhere in the brain; or alternatively, that structural or neurochemical changes lead to less efficient and less specific use of resources. Using sophisticated multivariate statistical modelling of the data, the authors present evidence of the latter explanation.

View Publication

老王永久免费佛系加速

老王佛系ios

View Map

老王佛系官网下载

Age-related slowing of the brain is caused by structural decline.

老王佛系VP

Dr. Darren Price and the Cam-CAN team have shown that age-related delay of the brain’s response to visual stimulation is partly explained by damage to information-carrying white matter fibres. At the same time, age-related delay to auditory stimulation is partly explained by damage to grey matter in the auditory cortex. This study is the first to find such a relationship providing important clues regarding the biological origins of cognitive decline.

View Publication

Cam-CAN joins the LifeBrain project as part of EU Horizons 2023 framework

老王佛系

Through new funding from the EU Horizon 2023 framework, Cam-CAN will join 10 other European cohorts in the LifeBrain project to study brain change across the lifespan. The result will be a unique multinational resource of approximately 18,500 individuals that will allow investigation of cognitive and mental health throughout life. The project provides an important example of the benefits of European funding and collaboration.

老王佛系免费

老王佛系VP

国外版知乎 Quora v2.8.56 学习知识 看看老外的难题 - Go破解:1 天前 · 国外版知乎 Quora 是问答论坛,Quora 有着大量高质量内容丰富知识,在用户生活或工作中遇到不知道的常识性问题时,可伍在 Quora 平台上免费发布相关问题,从而快速获得相关答案!Go破解听说 Quora 发表一个问题有秒回的,如果有学英语的小伙伴 ...

老王佛系免费

Cognitive abilities change with age, but why some skills decline and others do not is still not clear. Here, Dr. David Samu and his team used data from the Cam-CAN cohort to show that responsivity of specific sets of brain networks supports different cognitive functions over the lifespan and characterizes preserved cognition in older age. These findings provide insights into why some skills are more vulnerable to age-related decline while others are preserved.


Brain connections and mental speed important for reasoning ability in old age

老王佛系

The ability to solve abstract reasoning problems, sometimes known as ‘fluid intelligence’, plays a central role in many day-to-day activities across the lifespan. Dr Rogier Kievit and colleagues at Cam-CAN have studied which mental and neural differences play a role in supporting fluid intelligence. They found that mental speed is especially important. Using MRI they also found that the strength of connections between brain regions plays an important role in supporting both mental speed and agility. Mapping these three interconnected mechanisms using mathematical models will help us better understand healthy cognitive aging.

Download Publication

老王佛系官网加速器

How does the motor system compensate for age-related decline in sensory processing?

Our ability to sense the environment is known to decline as we grow older. However, a new Cam-CAN study led by Noham Wolpe finds that the brain’s motor system compensates for this change by relying more strongly on prediction from prior experience. This adapted combination of sensory information and prediction depends on the age-related differences in grey matter integrity and functional connectivity strength in a key brain network for movement.

Download Publication

老王佛系老王佛系官网下载

老王佛系

佛系梯子

81岁老母亲突遇灾劫,生命垂危,学佛念经神奇化解 ...:2021-5-22 · 2021年4月7日下午五点左右,我在上班的店面外,看到平时自己浇水护养的两棵酸柑树(橘子树)结果子了,而且果子结得很大颗也已经很成熟了。于是,我拿了一把梯子想爬上去把它采下来。当时我只是往梯子上走了一层,仅仅增加我的高度而已。

Download Publication

老王佛系VP

老王佛系ios

老王永久佛系梯子

From middle-age, the brains of obese individuals display differences in white matter similar to those in lean individuals ten years their senior, according to new research led by the University of Cambridge. White matter is the tissue that connects areas of the brain and allows for information to be communicated between regions.

Read News Article

Language systems are robust to ageing

老王佛系免费

Understanding spoken language requires the rapid integration of information at many different levels of analysis. Given the complexity and speed of this process, it is remarkably well preserved with age. Karen Campbell and colleagues challenge the conventional approach to neurocognitive aging by showing that the neural underpinnings of a given cognitive function depend on how you test it.

老王永久免费佛系加速

老王永久免费佛系加速

老王的FQ软件下载V2.2.16-老王的灯笼|免费FQ软件:2021-6-5 · 免费fq,老王下载,老王fq下载,2.2.9,老王的灯笼,最新版 前言: 老王的fq是一个免费的软件,由老王一个人维护,软件速度还是很不错的,如果富裕的朋友可伍给老王捐赠,毕竟个人开发者很不容易,老王为了这个软件,没少掉头发!

老王永久佛系免费下载

To better-understand how brain flexibility influences cognition, Kamen Tsvetanov and colleagues first developed techniques to improve measurements of brain function, and then applied those techniques to show that cognitive ability is influenced by brain network flexibility in the frontal cortex. Interestingly, this relationship becomes more important with age, showing that to maintain cognition through the lifespan, brain flexibility is crucial.

Download Publication

An exciting new technique measures the communication between different brain regions

佛系梯子

Using non-invasive functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) and cutting-edge algorithms, Cam-CAN researchers have developed a new technique to probe the communication patterns between different parts of the human brain. We hope that this technique will give us a clearer picture of how brain connectivity changes during the ageing process, and whether this has a significant effect on cognition.

Download Publication

老王永久佛系梯子老王永久免费佛系加速

快橙vqn官网

As greater numbers of us are living longer, it is increasingly important to understand how we can age healthily.

老王佛系官网下载

快橙vqn官网

Cam-CAN integrates across different teams of experts in epidemiology, neuroimaging, and cognitive sciences.

老王佛系VP

Current Investigations

Many of our current investigations are focussed on understanding how patterns of activity change and develop gradually over the lifespan.

continue reading

Cam-CAN will help change our perspectives on ageing

81岁老母亲突遇灾劫,生命垂危,学佛念经神奇化解 ...:2021-5-22 · 2021年4月7日下午五点左右,我在上班的店面外,看到平时自己浇水护养的两棵酸柑树(橘子树)结果子了,而且果子结得很大颗也已经很成熟了。于是,我拿了一把梯子想爬上去把它采下来。当时我只是往梯子上走了一层,仅仅增加我的高度而已。

老王永久免费佛系官网加速器

Our research takes a lifespan perspective to understanding how the mind and brain develop across the adult lifespan in order to preserve cognitive function. This research will include participants across the entire adult lifespan, aged 18 and up. Our aim is to understand how changes in the brain across the adult lifespan impact on cognitive functions like memory and attention. Our emphasis will be on determining the extent of neural flexibility and the potential for neural reorganisation to preserve cognitive functions.

Cam-CAN brings together researchers across diverse disciplines

This research requires the cooperation of researchers and collaborators across the UK to provide an interdisciplinary view of the ageing mind and brain. Our core research teams include members of research groups in Cambridge including the Departments of Psychology, Public Health and Primary Care, Psychiatry, Clinical Neurosciences, and Engineering in the University of Cambridge and the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit. Over 30 project researchers and collaborators will contribute to a new view of adult development that incorporates demographic, psychological, physical, and neural measures.

Information about the website

If you would like to have more information about this website, please contact the Web Manager

佛系梯子

If you would like to donate to Cam-CAN’s research, please contact us, or visit the University of Cambridge philanthropy page