Hurry...Start Learning Chinese Soon, Before It's Too Late!

calkins
March 16, 2009, 11:58 AM posted in General Discussion

From BBC, Monday, 16 March 2009

'Brain decline' begins at age 27

Concentration
Mental abilities decline at a relatively young age, experts suspect

Mental powers start to dwindle at 27 after peaking at 22, marking the start of old age, US research suggests.

Professor Timothy Salthouse of Virginia University found reasoning, speed of thought and spatial visualisation all decline in our late 20s.

Therapies designed to stall or reverse the ageing process may need to start much earlier, he said.

His seven-year study of 2,000 healthy people aged 18-60 is published in the journal Neurobiology of Aging.

To test mental agility, the study participants had to solve puzzles, recall words and story details and spot patterns in letters and symbols.

The natural decline of some of our mental abilities as we age starts much earlier than some of us might expect
Rebecca Wood of the Alzheimer's Research Trust

The same tests are already used by doctors to spot signs of dementia.

In nine out of 12 tests the average age at which the top performance was achieved was 22.

The first age at which there was any marked decline was at 27 in tests of brain speed, reasoning and visual puzzle-solving ability.

Things like memory stayed intact until the age of 37, on average, while abilities based on accumulated knowledge, such as performance on tests of vocabulary or general information, increased until the age of 60.

Professor Salthouse said his findings suggested "some aspects of age-related cognitive decline begin in healthy, educated adults when they are in their 20s and 30s."

Rebecca Wood of the Alzheimer's Research Trust agreed, saying: "This research suggests that the natural decline of some of our mental abilities as we age starts much earlier than some of us might expect - in our 20s and 30s.

"Understanding more about how healthy brains decline could help us understand what goes wrong in serious diseases like Alzheimer's.

"Alzheimer's is not a natural part of getting old; it is a physical disease that kills brain cells, affecting tens of thousands of under 65s too.

"Much more research is urgently needed if we are to offer hope to the 700,000 people in the UK who live with dementia, a currently incurable condition."

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henning
March 16, 2009, 12:27 PM

Calkins,
as you can read from the study, us old guys can overcompansate with proven mental frameworks and a large backpack of experience.

(said Lao Wang and left the office)

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tvan
March 16, 2009, 12:32 PM

Too late.

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calkins
March 16, 2009, 12:32 PM

Henning ;)  My problem is that too many things have fallen out of my backpack in the past 5 years!

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changye
March 16, 2009, 01:22 PM

If it's any comfort ....

while abilities based on accumulated knowledge, such as performance on tests of vocabulary or general information, increased until the age of 60.

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kimiik
March 16, 2009, 03:16 PM

Declining brain could also be of some help :

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4735030.stm

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goulnik
March 16, 2009, 04:05 PM

I seem to have read about this somewhere...

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tvan
March 16, 2009, 07:19 PM

Maybe it's just the English...

Seriously, I think language acquisition skills must decline much sooner.During the SE Asian influx, it was amazing not only how fast young children learned English relative to their (young) parents, but also how some of the older children had picked up one or two extra languages as they moved between camps.

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henning
March 16, 2009, 08:05 PM

I think it is a fallacy to assume that kids pick up languages miraculously.

I am currently observing how my 4-year-old struggles. Yes, he is making admirable progress in both languages, but, boy, does he fight. Vocab, pronounciation, grammar, the whole works (pronounciation being the easiest - he laughs at my tones!).

And, yes, he is lagging behind his peers (although fortunately the gap closes). He catches up faster than any adult, but it is learning just as we know it: He makes the same mistakes over and over and over and over and over again. Until one day they start to diminish slowly.

The CPod effect is there also: Stuff he likes he picks up on the fly. He knew "Triceratops", "Tyrannosaurus Rex", or "Pterodactylus" (!) before he even used the correct German words for "blue" and "yellow".