New research following children for more than a decade links high screen exposure before age two to accelerated brain maturation, slower decision-making, and increased anxiety by adolescence.
Differences in kinetics of retinal output signals originate at least in part from differences in synaptic output from distinct bipolar cell types.
New research reveals that numbers in our visual field can subtly distort how we judge spatial positions, showing that perception is shaped by both numerical magnitude and object-based processing.
Children exposed to high levels of screen time before age two showed changes in brain development that were linked to slower ...
Children exposed to high levels of screen time before age 2 showed changes in brain development that were linked to slower ...
A long-term study shows how screen time in babies may alter brain development and increase vulnerability to anxiety years ...
New Year’s Day is widely framed as a moment of renewal, optimism, and forward momentum. Yet across households, workplaces, ...
Study found small numbers shift attention upward on vertical lines, contradicting predictions and revealing new insights into brain function.
Children with higher infant screen time showed earlier maturation of brain networks linked to visual processing and cognitive control. The researchers suggested that intense, highly stimulating screen ...
A new study has identified a specific neural pathway that connects the brain’s processing of internal states to the formation ...
When users swipe through profiles on dating applications, their brains make split-second decisions based on limited visual information. A new study suggests that these rapid judgments rely on two ...