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45 votes
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Terry Pratchett’s novels may have held clues to his dementia a decade before diagnosis, our new study suggests
36 votes -
Keira is one of many Greenlandic families living on the Danish mainland who are fighting to get their children returned to them after they were removed by social services
14 votes -
How a flawed idea is teaching millions of kids to be poor readers
64 votes -
Large US study finds memory decline surge in young people
27 votes -
Rising cognitive disability as a public health concern among US adults, trends from the behavioral risk factor surveillance system, 2013–2023
29 votes -
“Results - I don't have dementia”
12 votes -
After quitting antidepressants, some people suffer surprising, lingering symptoms
36 votes -
Hydropower, heat pumps and electric vehicles made Norway a climate darling. Oil and gas exports made it rich. The paradox shaping this country's future – and the world's energy transition.
11 votes -
Why do some gamers invert their controls? Scientists now have answers, but they’re not what you think.
36 votes -
Famous cognitive psychology experiments that failed to replicate
52 votes -
Air pollution raises risk of dementia, say Cambridge scientists
16 votes -
How a controversial Danish ‘parenting test’ separated a Greenlandic woman from her children
30 votes -
Genetic variant tied to doubled dementia risk for older men
14 votes -
Study finds strongest evidence yet that shingles vaccine helps cut dementia risk
31 votes -
Study unlocks how diabetes distorts memory and reward processing. The risk of developing Alzheimer’s is 65% higher in diabetics.
17 votes -
Mean World Syndrome - moderate to heavy exposure to violence-related content in mass media may cause people to perceive the world to be more dangerous than it is
36 votes -
Alzheimer's mortality lowest for taxi, ambulance drivers
6 votes -
I am looking for 100% ad-free apps for older adults with dementia. Things like jigsaw puzzles, coloring and the like. Paid is fine.
I work in IT, and was the caregiver for both my parents as they aged. You'd think I would be the one that people turn to to ask this question, and yet I have been utterly frustrated by my attempts...
I work in IT, and was the caregiver for both my parents as they aged. You'd think I would be the one that people turn to to ask this question, and yet I have been utterly frustrated by my attempts to find such.
I have a few folks who are extended family and friends that are now in the early/mid stages of different forms of dementia, and a real pain point is that they no longer have the capacity to recognize ads, and will unfailingly click and install scam apps via the Apple store. Think things like 'cleaner' apps that have a $50/week subscription fee, and other abusive tactics. The #1 subject I get called about is some ad popping up after they've finished a puzzle, and now they think they're out of space, and in a panic.
This is not a small problem. The coloring and puzzles they can still do bring them happiness and stability through their day; removal of the ipads entirely causes them a lot of stress. (TV is nothing but ragebait, and a non-starter. They do have books on tape, but get tired of listening rather quickly.)
I have been completely unable to locate ad-free, paid versions of these types of apps. I'm not looking for free. I don't care about the cost. I just need apps that only do what they say they do, and don't have unexpected pop-ups, ads, or anything else, and I thought perhaps the folks here might know of some.
Any ideas?
[edit] Only five hours in, and I've already gotten more insightful, helpful responses than anywhere else I've asked. You all are the best.
56 votes -
Study of 500,000 medical records links viruses with Alzheimer's again and again
29 votes -
Scientists research man missing 90% of his brain who leads a normal life
27 votes -
Alzheimer’s blood test catches 90% of early dementia cases, study finds
38 votes -
What are your beliefs about aging?
Given all the noise about whether President Biden is frail or cognitively compromised, I thought it would be interesting to informally survey Tildes denizens for their beliefs about aging. These...
Given all the noise about whether President Biden is frail or cognitively compromised, I thought it would be interesting to informally survey Tildes denizens for their beliefs about aging.
These are purely conversational questions, each of which is so broad it could be its own topic - I have no skills as a demographer or pollster.
I also realize there may be national or ethnic definitions around who counts as venerable as opposed to senile, so I'll ask you to include nationality or relevant ethnicity in your response.
- What decade of your life are you in - < 20, twenties, thirties, etc.
- In what decade (see above) do you think old age begins?
- What characterizes being "old" to you? For example, loss of sexual attractiveness, diminution of physical strength or stamina, illness, loss of mental agility, etc.
- At what age do you think you will be too old to function as you want to in life?
- Do you have experiences of aging (personal, family, acquaintances, caregiving roles) that give you concerns or hopes about your own future?
- Do you believe age confers any benefits, and what might those be?
- Assuming no catastrophic health events, do you believe life will seem better or worse to you as you age?
- Do you feel like aging people are a burden to those younger?
- Do you find yourself using pejorative words about age?
Full disclosure: There is evidence that what you believe about aging influences how well you age.
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I'm in my 50's, US, ethnically Jewish.
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My current inclination is to say that old age begins around age 75 in general, but I've met people who were what I'd call old at 30 and young at 90.
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I know that various measures of peak {insert attribute here} start declining much earlier. 75 - 80 seems to be the point at which many things break down irreparably for the vast majority of people. That's the age range where the ability to live independently drops off, and that's what I count as "old".
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I hope to be independent for at least another 25 years, but that's already somewhat determined by a limiting progressive condition. My experiences with aging are biased by highly educated people and super-ager relatives. There have been several centenarians in my family, each of whom was cognitively intact until death even if they were no longer completely independent physically.
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I believe age confers the ability to recognize patterns based on cumulative experience. That's what passes for wisdom. The ability to acquire new memories and skills can be more rapid with connections to the previous body of knowledge. Socializing is definitely easier with many years of practice and the dulling of anxieties - the worst that can happen usually already did. For better or worse, people look up to you as a survivor and teacher...
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Life will probably get better with age. I've had an extended time without a job followed by a job purely chosen, so I can say that "retirement" is likely to be much more productive and enjoyable both for self and society. I expect old age to be a time of reconnecting with others and doing the charitable activities I don't have flexibility to engage in now.
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This is a tough one. At a general scale, we're encouraged to work as hard as possible to hoard resources that will ensure we have the means to maintain independence and purchase care when we're old. Rather, we could live lighter, share more, and build relationships which can sustain us. I count myself fortunate to avoid the burden that many others have endured when dealing with debilitated or demented relatives. And yet there are so many ways in which nations and cultures other than the U.S. do a better job of sharing care.
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There's a lot of online discourse about greedy boomers, crumbly conservatives, and so on, but I think those are manufactured divisive narratives. I've been acquainted with so many people over the years who don't fit neatly into demographic or political boxes. On that evidence, I don't think any generation has a greater balance of virtue or vice compared to the others.
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I use "adulting" and "old fart" self-denigratingly. I follow r/oldhagfashion for actual IDGAF style ideas.
18 votes -
The brain makes a lot of waste. Now scientists think they know where it goes (in mice).
20 votes -
Menthol inhalation may boost cognitive ability in Alzheimer’s
19 votes -
To make sure grandmas like his don't get conned, he scams the scammers
25 votes -
Duty to Warn's John Gartner breaks down Donald Trump's cognitive decline
32 votes -
Root cause of Alzheimer's may be fat buildup in brain cells, research suggests
22 votes -
The Dunning-Kruger effect is autocorrelation
30 votes -
Finnish study finds that people from different cultures reported the same bodily sensations when listening to the same songs
7 votes -
My parents’ dementia felt like the end of joy. But when they got sick, I turned to a new generation of roboticists—and their glowing, talking, blobby creations.
19 votes -
Here's why automaticity is real actually
17 votes -
The vanishing family: They all have a 50-50 chance of inheriting a cruel genetic mutation — which means disappearing into dementia in middle age
29 votes -
The most frustrating thing about ADHD for me is
...When I can't complete a task right now but instead have to wait for some reason. For example: When I have to complete a task list for school, and would love to just blitz through it all, but...
...When I can't complete a task right now but instead have to wait for some reason. For example:
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When I have to complete a task list for school, and would love to just blitz through it all, but have to wait on someone else to fill out some form. Then I get it in an email a day or two later, but have already completely forgotten about the list and things I should do, because something else took over my mind. And I put it off because I have other things to do. Then the deadline comes and goes, and I'm sitting there thinking "Well shit, if I could have done it immediately then it would have been fine."
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I ask my kids for things they want at the store. I know I need to add it to the grocery list app immediately or I won't remember it, but I'm driving them to camp and can't use my phone. By the time I've dropped them off, I forgot already. Then they're upset with me because I forgot their things, and I'm upset with me because I forgot their things.
All these little things that just add up to make life a little more frustrating and annoying.
Anyone else with ADHD, have any tips to overcome these? Frustrations of your own to vent? How do you explain to others that it isn't you being careless or lazy, but instead it's your brain working against itself?
44 votes -
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Alzheimer’s drug gets Food and Drug Administration panel’s backing, setting the stage for broader US use
13 votes -
Study of male footballers in Sweden, over many years, found they were one and a half times more likely to develop dementia than the general population
7 votes -
Vitamin D supplementation and incident dementia: Effects of sex, APOE, and baseline cognitive status
7 votes -
European Commission contacted Swedish authorities after it emerged they were planning to deport a 74-year-old British woman with severe Alzheimers
4 votes -
Do we see reality as it is? | Donald Hoffman
7 votes -
Over-reliance on English hinders cognitive science
4 votes -
Ron Jeremy found ‘not competent’ to stand trial in serial rape case
6 votes -
Millions of Alzheimer’s patients have been given hope after a new drug has been shown to slow memory decline by 27% over eighteen months. It's the biggest breakthrough in a generation.
8 votes -
TikTok is changing the way we talk about ADHD—for better and worse
2 votes -
How “dementia villages” work
6 votes -
Two decades of Alzheimer's research may be based on deliberate fraud
31 votes -
Is your smartphone ruining your memory? A special report on the rise of ‘digital amnesia’
12 votes -
Where a thousand digital eyes keep watch over the elderly
3 votes -
How mental health became a social media minefield
13 votes -
What are your cognitive biases, and how do they affect you?
From Wikipedia: A cognitive bias is a systematic pattern of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment. Individuals create their own "subjective reality" from their perception of the input. An...
From Wikipedia:
A cognitive bias is a systematic pattern of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment. Individuals create their own "subjective reality" from their perception of the input. An individual's construction of reality, not the objective input, may dictate their behavior in the world. Thus, cognitive biases may sometimes lead to perceptual distortion, inaccurate judgment, illogical interpretation, or what is broadly called irrationality.
For obvious reasons, it is much easier to identify biases in others than ourselves. Nevertheless, some of us went through practices (such as psychotherapy), experiences, and introspection that allowed us to put our biases in check. So, instead of scrutinizing the behavior of others (something that comes naturally to us, especially on the internet), here I ask you to exercise some self-criticism. What intellectual tendencies you have that obsessively repeat themselves in different contexts?
I should note that cognitive biases do not always lead to bad outcomes or falsehoods, as stated in Wikipedia:
Although it may seem like such misperceptions would be aberrations, biases can help humans find commonalities and shortcuts to assist in the navigation of common situations in life.[5]
On this thread, I am deliberately not asking about political bias or anything of the sort, including all the juicy controversial subjects surrounding it. Anything that often leads to uncivil discussion should be considered out of bounds.
For inspiration, look at this list (you don't need to identify a named bias, though... a subjective description of something you believe to be a form of bias is enough).
Dear Mods, due to the contentious nature of the subject, please feel free to act more aggressively on this topic than you currently do.
9 votes -
Experimental compound revives memory in Alzheimer’s disease mice
11 votes