Science and Technology : No new 'learning' brain cells after age 13: study

Clyde C Coger Jr

Well-Known Member
PREMIUM MEMBER
Nov 17, 2006
63,024
12,098
www.amazon.com
Occupation
Speaker/Teacher/Author
...
No new 'learning' brain cells after age 13: study


Mariëtte Le Roux

AFP

... The finding challenges a widely-held view that the brain's hippocampus region continues to generate neurons, which transmit information through chemical and electrical signals, well into adulthood in humans, as in other mammals.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/no-learning-brain-cells-age-13-study-180058691.html
Part-MVD-Mvd6653411-1-1-0.jpg

Around the age of 13, the human brain region that hosts memory and learning appears to stop producing nerve cells, according to a new study. (AFP Photo/RAUL ARBOLEDA)

 
This has to be a preliminary study. Because if true, people couldn't get thru college or learn new things. Unless they are implying that much of that region is untapped memory



.
 
This has to be a preliminary study. Because if true, people couldn't get thru college or learn new things. Unless they are implying that much of that region is untapped memory



.
Or full capacity to learn new information is reached when the brain in 13 years old. Maybe that's what it means.
 
Is memorizing information the same thing as learning?

Maybe it means that paradigm shifts are no longer possible. How many people "believe" things they learned as kids even though they make no sense?



That is learning by rote/wrote?

You learned much as a child that didn't make sense until you got older



.
 

Donate

Support destee.com, the oldest, most respectful, online black community in the world - PayPal or CashApp

Latest profile posts

HODEE wrote on Etophil's profile.
Welcome to Destee
@Etophil
Destee wrote on SleezyBigSlim's profile.
Hi @SleezyBigSlim ... Welcome Welcome Welcome ... :flowers: ... please make yourself at home ... :swings:
Back
Top